Mark Vogelsberger: Simulating galaxy formation for clues to the universe
“In astrophysics, we have only this one universe which we can observe,” the physics professor says. “With a computer, we can create different universes, which we can check.”
“In astrophysics, we have only this one universe which we can observe,” the physics professor says. “With a computer, we can create different universes, which we can check.”
A specialist in algebraic geometry, the long-standing professor and former department head was influential across the Institute as an innovator in teaching first-year students.
The Common Ground for Computing Education is facilitating collaborations to develop new classes for students to pursue computational knowledge within the context of their fields of interest.
Those selected for these positions receive additional support to pursue their research and develop their careers.
Researchers decipher when and why immune cells fail to respond to immunotherapy, and suggest that T cells need a different kind of prodding in order to re-engage the immune response.
A National Science Foundation-funded team will use artificial intelligence to speed up discoveries in physics, astronomy, and neuroscience.
Graduate student Nicholas Kamp describes the MicroBooNE experiment and its implications for our understanding of fundamental particles.
Awards support research to improve the efficiency, scalability, and adoption of clean energy technologies.
Neuroscientists find the internal workings of next-word prediction models resemble those of language-processing centers in the brain.
Mergers between two neutron stars have produced more heavy elements in last 2.5 billion years than mergers between neutron stars and black holes.
Honor recognizes professors who went the extra mile advising during the pandemic’s disruptions.
Fossils indicate a communal nesting ground and adults who foraged and took care of the young as a herd, scientists say.
Professors Linda Griffith and Feng Zhang along with Guillermo Ameer ScD ’99, Darrell Gaskin SM ’87, William Hahn, and Vamsi Mootha recognized for contributions to medicine, health care, and public health.
A new study finds cutting off cells’ supplies of lipids can slow the growth of tumors in mice.
Such planetary smashups are likely common in young solar systems, but they haven’t been directly observed.