The goal is to collect data to develop new and improved ecosystem models & forecast how these systems will function under conditions never seen before
University of Texas at Arlington electrical engineer Chenyun Pan has earned a Department of Energy Early Career Research grant.
Soft robotics researchers from Rice and Harvard have created a nonelectronic control system that uses air to process information.
Indiana University researchers are co-leading a project to better understand and predict weather phenomena that contribute to heavy rainfall.
With a $1.1 million grant from DOE, seismologist Emily Brodsky will address seismic challenges involved in carbon sequestration and geothermal energy.
Supartha Podder, an assistant professor at Stony Brook University, received a two-year $400,000 DOE grant to study the power of quantum witnesses.
With renewed funding, UC San Diego-based Q-MEEN-C moves one step closer to neuromorphic computing.
The team will produce genetically enhanced oilseeds, establish the “rules” of oilseeds’ metabolic circuitry, and develop synthetic biology tools.
Researchers reported a new way to look at the atoms that make up MXenes & their precursors, using a technique called secondary ion mass spectrometry.
Baiz studies electrocatalytic reaction mechanisms under confinement; Rose studies control of coupling between surface molecules and semiconductors.