Success Story: NIW Approved In Just Over 3 Months Without RFE For A Chinese Postdoctoral Researcher

 

Client’s Testimonial:

“It has been a very smooth experience. Given my busy schedule, I greatly appreciated the clear instructions and the responsiveness. Since I had a good idea about what my own research and my future plans were, it was not hard to put together all the information needed. Overall, it came down to organizing everything according to a plan and carrying it out, and I am glad that it went well.”


On January 13th, 2026, we received another EB-2 NIW (National Interest Waiver) approval for a Postdoctoral Researcher in the Field of Theoretical High Energy Physics (Approval Notice).


General Field: Theoretical High Energy Physics

Position at the Time of Case Filing: Postdoctoral Researcher

Country of Origin: China

State of Residence at the Time of Filing: Massachusetts

Approval Notice Date: January 13th, 2026

Processing Time: 3 months, 3 days (Premium Processing Upgrade Requested)


Case Summary:  

Some of the most consequential advances in science begin with questions that look purely theoretical. In this NIW case, the client, an expert in theoretical high-energy physics with a Ph.D. in Physics, built a focused record around a central challenge in modern physics: clarifying how gravity and quantum mechanics fit together, and what that relationship reveals about black holes, spacetime, and the role of quantum information.

The client’s proposed endeavor is to continue applying holographic and quantum information theoretic techniques to investigate the fundamental principles that connect spacetime and quantum information. While this work is deeply mathematical, the petition framed its substantial merit and national importance in practical adjudicator terms. Advancing the scientific foundations of quantum gravity supports the long-term progress of U.S. research capacity in areas that intersect with quantum science and high-impact computational methods. We also emphasized that the client’s research trajectory is designed to generate field-wide value across institutions, rather than being confined to any single employer, reinforcing the national benefit of allowing the work to continue without the constraints of a permanent job offer requirement.

To show the client was well-positioned to advance the endeavor, we highlighted measurable indicators of research output and independent reliance. The client authored 17 peer-reviewed journal articles, 1 peer-reviewed conference article, and 1 preprint, along with a record that has earned 280 citations. In a specialized field where influence is measured by whether other researchers build on the results, these citations were presented not as numbers alone, but as evidence that independent experts have repeatedly relied on the client’s findings to inform and validate related work.

The petition also documented competitive research support, including funding from the National Science Foundation. Rather than treating funding as a standalone credential, we positioned it as third-party validation that the work aligns with U.S. scientific priorities and has been evaluated as worthy of support through rigorous review.

The case was further strengthened by 2 letters of recommendation from established experts familiar with the client’s research contributions. These letters reinforced the objective record and helped translate specialized theoretical advances into clear impact statements for a non-specialist adjudicator. One recommender noted: “It is therefore within the interests of the United States to allow [Client’s] research to continue uninterrupted.”

USCIS approved the client’s I-140 EB-2 National Interest Waiver petition without an RFE. This approval reflects a persuasive NIW presentation built around substantial merit and national importance, clear evidence of the client’s ability to advance the work, and a well-reasoned showing that waiving the job offer requirement would benefit the United States by enabling continued progress in a foundational area of physics.