2019
Associate Barry Madore elaborates on discrepancies in the Hubble constant measurement
August 29, 2019

Live Science interviews Madore to weigh in on why researchers produce conflicting results when attempting to measure the rate of cosmic expansion.
Mini-EUSO hitches ride on spacecraft, paves way for future experiments
August 28, 2019

Mini-EUSO hitched a ride with Russia's Soyuz MS14 to the International Space Station. Mini-EUSO is a prototype for two University of Chicago-led experiments, EUSO-SPB2 and POEMMA, which aim to discover the origin of the highest-energy particles and to study their sources and interactions.
Researchers propose some exoplanets could be more diverse than Earth
August 27, 2019

Geophysical Sciences postdoc, Stephanie Olson, suggests that exoplanets with favorable ocean circulation patterns could be better suited to support life than Earth itself.
Scientists discover cosmic rarity in Antarctic snow
August 26, 2019

Researchers found traces of Iron-60, an extremely rare isotope produced when a star explodes, in Antarctica. Research Prof. Priscilla Frisch weighs in on how this interstellar dust made it's way to Earth.
UChicago names building after pioneering physicist Albert Michelson
August 22, 2019

The University of Chicago has named its Physics Research Center in honor of former faculty member and founding physics department chair Albert A. Michelson, a pioneering scientist who was the first American to win a Nobel Prize in the sciences. The 1907 prize honored his field-defining work, including taking the first accurate measurement of the speed of light.
PSD Spotlight: Ellen Harder
August 22, 2019

Ellen works as the business administrator in the Flash Center for Computational Science in Astronomy & Astrophysics. She was born in Evanston and raised in Edgewater and Wilmette, IL. She has been a member of the PSD community for six and a half years.
UChicago study offers way to test whether water flowed deep underground on Mars
August 21, 2019

A new study by UChicago researchers shakes up the picture of Martian salt—and offers new ways to test what Mars’ water would have looked like. Asst. Prof. Edwin Kite’s team analyzed salt deposits and built models to help determine how and why Mars dried out.
Astronomers may have detected gravitational waves from a new type of event
August 19, 2019

Prof. Daniel Holz discusses the detection of gravitational waves that may have been from a black hole swallowing a neutron star with Science News Magazine.
Prof. Daniel Holz discusses black hole mergers in Quanta interview
August 19, 2019

Prof. Daniel Holz discusses research on black hole pairing and tripling and explains how this research can help scientists measure the eccentricities of black holes' orbits in the near future.
UChicago grad student joins Fermilab panel promoting diversity in science at Wakandacon
August 19, 2019

Historical photo of Orion Nebula featured on NASA APOD
August 19, 2019

NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day features the 1901 photograph, The Orion Nebula, taken by George Ritchey at Yerkes Observatory. The original glass photographic plate, sensitive to green and blue wavelengths, has been digitized and light-to-dark inverted to produce a positive image. Ritchey's plates from over a hundred years ago preserve astronomical data and can still be used for exploring astrophysical processes. Digitization project: W. Cerny, R. Kron, Y. Liang, J. Lin, M. Martinez, E. Medina, B. Moss, B. Ogonor, M. Ransom, J. Sanchez (Univ. of Chicago)
Department of Chemistry Launches New Program to Foster an Inclusive Climate for Graduate Students
August 13, 2019

The Department of Chemistry's Lunch and Learn program helps incoming graduate students acclimate to the University by preparing them for first-year coursework, helping them build a broad foundation of practical skills critical for excellence in graduate school, and more.
Cutting the Carbon Footprint in UChicago Labs
August 12, 2019

Student-driven changes in laboratories at UChicago, including a Shut the Sash program, yield energy and cost savings.
Pioneering UChicago astrophysicist looks back at historic launch of solar probe
August 12, 2019

In the year since the launch of the Parker Solar Probe, UChicago's pioneering astrophysicist, Eugene Parker, has been receiving updates on the NASA mission, which has already come closer to the sun than any spacecraft. Parker recently visited with Nicky Fox, director of NASA’s Heliophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington, to reflect on the launch.
Argonne receives go-ahead for $815 million upgrade to X-ray facility
August 9, 2019

For the past quarter-century, the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory has helped scientists and engineers make groundbreaking discoveries—providing extremely bright X-rays to investigate everything from dinosaur bones and lunar rocks to materials for new solar panels and new pharmaceutical drugs. Now Argonne, which is operated by the University of Chicago, has been cleared to begin building a massive, $815 million upgrade to its kilometer-long X-ray facility.