New UC Riverside research suggests nitrogen released by gas-powered machines causes dry soil to let go of carbon & release it back into the atmosphere
Funding from the Department of Energy will allow physics department to add a new faculty member and a graduate student.
Advancing the understanding of sorbents and catalysts to be co-designed will achieve more active, efficient, and durable systems for reactive capture.
The new agreement will create research opportunities for UTEP faculty & students as well as internship & employment opportunities in critical fields.
A team of researchers aims to detect dark matter directly via its scattering from the constituents of the atomic nuclei of a detection medium.
The study will provide crucial details on cloud and precipitation properties in the Southern Ocean.
Getting to the ‘Point’: Powerful Computing Helps Identify Potential New Treatments for Coronaviruses
Researchers have been searching for locations on coronavirus spikes where antibodies have a better chance to attach and stop infections of human cells
Awardees will study resources for carbon storage, model water systems, and examine biological systems as bioenergy sources, among other projects.
Long-term warming is threatening the viability of deciduous trees, so soil microbes are releasing less CO2 in the summer because they’re starving.
University of Arkansas mechanical engineering professor Xiangbo “Henry” Meng has received a $750,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.