2022
Many planets could have atmospheres rich in helium, study finds
November 22, 2022
A new study explains how faraway planets with helium atmospheres may be very common and why.
James Webb Space telescope reveals a faraway planet’s band of clouds
November 21, 2022
New observations of WASP-39b with the James Webb Space Telescope have provided a clearer picture of the exoplanet, showing the presence of sodium, potassium, water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and sulfur dioxide in the planet's atmosphere.
UChicago CS research finds new angle on database query processing with geometry
November 21, 2022
A new paper from the research group of UChicago CS assistant professor Sanjay Krishnan caps three years of research on how computational geometry can make approximate query processing more efficient.
Meet 3 LGBTQ+ scientists putting pride in STEM
November 21, 2022
University of Chicago computer science Ph.D. student Jas Brooks was interviewed by The Advocate for Pride in STEM Day, Nov. 18, for being a successful LGBTQ+ person in STEM.
PSD Spotlight: Meredith Davis
November 15, 2022
The PSD November Spotlight is Meredith Davis, media relations manager for the Physical Sciences Division and Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering. She began at UChicago in November 2021.
Nine PSD members named Highly Cited Researchers
November 15, 2022
The Highly Cited Researchers™ list from Clarivate™ identifies scientists and social scientists who have demonstrated significant influence through publication of multiple highly cited papers during the last decade. Ten PSD members made the 2022 list.
Chemists create an ‘artificial photosynthesis’ system that is 10 times more efficient than existing systems
November 10, 2022
A new study from six UChicago chemists shows an innovative new system for artificial photosynthesis that is more productive than previous artificial systems by an order of magnitude and could produce ethanol, methane, or other fuels.
A slime mold turns your smartwatch into a living Tamagotchi
November 10, 2022
What if your ‘90’s Tamagotchi pet wasn’t digital? What if your devices were really alive, at least a little bit, and you had to care for them in order for them to work? These are the questions grad student Jasmine Lu and Assoc. Prof. Pedro Lopes of UChicago Computer Science set out to answer with their Slime Mold Smart Watch.
$9.2M grant to UChicago computer scientists will improve graph analytics
November 10, 2022
UChicago computer scientists will lead a $9.2M grant from ARPA for the UpDown System, to speed up graph analytics. The effort will reinvent computer architecture, dramatically increasing efficiency and scalability for graph computing. Prof. Andrew Chien wil head a team including Henry Hoffmann, Yanjing Li, and Michael Maire.
Pranav Gokhale, PhD’20, among Crain’s Chicago Business 40 Under 40 for 2022
November 7, 2022
Pranav Gokhale, PhD‘20 Computer Science, was among Crain’s Chicago Business 40 Under 40 for 2022. Prof. Fred Chong comments on his success in co-leading their quantum startup, Super.tech.
2022 Chicago Quantum Summit to gather leaders defining the emerging field
November 4, 2022
The fifth annual Chicago Quantum Summit, hosted by the Chicago Quantum Exchange, will convene academic, government, and industry leaders in quantum information science and engineering on Nov. 14-15. The public can attend on Zoom.
A massive space rock impact may have kickstarted Earth’s magnetic field
November 4, 2022
A new study led by Prof. Fausto Cattaneo, Dept. of Astronomy and Astrophysics, informs Earth-Moon formation theories. Through analysis of the dynamics of fluids and electrically conducting fluids, the researchers concluded that the Earth must have been magnetized either before the impact of an interplanetary collision or as a result of it.
Scientists discover way to target ‘undruggable’ molecules involved in cancer
November 3, 2022
UChicago chemist Raymond Moellering is in a group that has created an innovative way to build synthetic molecules that can target these previously “undruggable” transcription factors. The breakthrough holds promise for drugs and treatments as well as tools to better understand cancer biology.
UChicago AI Summit examines promise and concerns for science and society
November 3, 2022
The Summit on AI in Society, organized in October by the Institute on the Formation of Knowledge (IFK), featured several UChicago CS speakers alongside social scientists, artists, policy experts, historians, and philosophers.
Diana Franklin talks K-12 quantum ed on Entangled Things podcast
November 2, 2022
Assoc. Prof. Diana Franklin, Dept. of Computer Science, was interviewed by the podcast Entangled Things about K-12 education in quantum, suspension of disbelief, and ways to communicate quantum topics to broader audiences.