Squeezing an electron crystal
Researchers have determined the energy required to add an electron to a Wigner crystal—an ordered crystalline state made of electrons rather than atoms.
Read MoreResearchers have determined the energy required to add an electron to a Wigner crystal—an ordered crystalline state made of electrons rather than atoms.
Read More“If somebody gave me millions of dollars and set me in an isolated lab, I don’t think I’d make any impact. Impact is all about collaborating with other people, bouncing ideas off them, realizing they have a different technique. It’s a human endeavor, science.”
Read MoreReed has been selected to serve on the National Science Board, which provides advice and oversight for the National Science Foundation.
Read MoreA U alumna and bioengineer explains the value of a science background in business.
Read MoreScience@Sundance highlights movies that excel at using art and storytelling to engage their audiences in important science-related issues.
Read MoreThe Faraday chemistry lectures entertain and teach.
Read MoreRobots, tempura-fried tarantulas and science: Unexpected things to associate with competitors on the popular TV show, but those are passions for U robotics professor Steve Mascaro and U alum and entomologist Eric Middleton.
Read MoreJoin the U in celebrating the dedication of the Crocker Science Center on April 20 at 2 p.m.
Read MoreGet your tickets as the MUSE Project hosts former chief scientist at NASA and author of “Hidden Figures” for keynote presentation on theme year of empowerment.
Read MoreKnatokie Ford, advocate for women in science, technology, engineering and math, shared her journey as the confident “female Steve Urkel” from her childhood, to feeling like a fraud as a grad student at Harvard, to conquering the imposter syndrome.
Read MoreMathematics student Scott Neville becomes third Churchill Scholar for the U.
Read MoreKnatokie Ford, advocate for women in STEM and personal growth, to speak at the U Feb. 27.
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