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Electrical engineers from UCLA's Samueli School of Engineering have developed a more efficient way of converting light from one wavelength to another.
Dr. Isaacs’s project will focus on developing new methods for analyzing high-performance applications.
They will study data from the Southern Ocean, as part of ongoing efforts to understand how ocean processes impact clouds in that part of the planet.
UNT chemistry professor Shengqian Ma will spearhead the development of an industrial direct-air carbon dioxide capture module.
In providing a general map of a particular region, sky surveys are also one of the largest data generators in science.
The work sheds light on the web of hydrogen bonds that gives water its strange properties, playing a role in many chemical and biological processes.
While making samples to pursue their own goals, scientists discovered that a byproduct of their experiments was needed for layered materials research.
Using the Advanced Photon Source with new computer-driven algorithms, scientists will be able to study batteries and electronics at nanometer scales.
Microelectronics projects will support more powerful supercomputing, explore new materials, foster advanced computing architectures, and more.
Jamal Jalilian-Marian and Adrian Dumitru will focus on understanding the conditions that may have existed in the early Universe.