News

2022

A new shortcut for quantum simulations could unlock new doors for technology

August 11, 2022

A map of quantum phase change in rainbow colors

Prof. David Mazziotti, Dept. of Chemistry, led the creation of a method to efficiently calculate quantum phase transitions. This new shortcut for quantum simulations could unlock new doors for technology similar to ones that led to MRI machines and the transistors in modern computers and phones.


Could learning algebra in my 60s make me smarter?

August 8, 2022

Amie Wilkinson in front of a chalkbaord

Prof. Amie Wilkinson, Dept. of Mathematics, advises her uncle, The New Yorker writer Alec Wilkinson, on best practices for learning math.


The future remembers its past: Largest gift of art to PSD features career retrospective of Hyde Park painter

August 5, 2022

Julie Richman

In the biggest gift of art to the University of Chicago’s Physical Sciences Division and Harris School for Public Policy, the family of Julie Richman has donated twenty of her paintings for display in buildings representative of the modern architectural plan for campus. The gift was made in honor of Phil Richman, AB’47, Prof. Emeritus Bruce Winstein, and Francisco Fonta, SB’13.


$205 million investment accelerates construction of the Giant Magellan Telescope

August 2, 2022

Segment of Giant Magellan Telescope

The Giant Magellan Telescope, the most powerful telescope ever engineered using the world’s largest mirrors, today announced it has secured a $205 million investment from its international consortium to accelerate construction. This investment marks one of the largest funding rounds for the telescope since its founding and includes leading commitments from the University of Chicago, Carnegie Institution for Science, Harvard University, the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP), The University of Texas at Austin, and University of Arizona. 


NSF awards $20 million to universities for advanced data science

August 1, 2022

An illustration of translucent bar graph columns rising across a black expanse to suggest the field of data science

A $20M NSF award will establish the Institute for Data, Econometrics, Algorithms, and Learning, a multi-disciplinary effort led by the University of Illinois Chicago in collaboration with the University of Chicago and other area universities. It will focus on the foundations of machine learning, high-dimensional data analysis and inference, and data science and society.


PSD in the News - July 2022

August 1, 2022

PSD against a white and turquoise background

This month PSD researchers have been featured for their efforts to use supercomputing simulations to reveal weaknesses in HIV-1 defense, share the scientific community's enthusiasm for the first full-color images of James Webb Space Telescope, and to invent a ‘quantum flute’ that can make particles of light move together.


XENON collaboration shatters sensitivity record in search for dark matter

July 28, 2022

Component of XENON Detector

With their latest results, the XENON collaboration broke their own record for the most sensitive direct detection dark matter experiment ever conducted. 


Jordan Bimm comments, Russia to drop out of ISS after 2024

July 27, 2022

ESA French astronaut Thomas Pesquet, left, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Novitsky, center, and U.S. astronaut Peggy Annette Whitson pose for a photo before their final preflight practical examination in a mock-up of a Soyuz space craft at Russian Space Training

UChicago historian of science Jordan Bimm says Russia's departure from the International Space Station creates a constellation of uncertainties about maintaining its operation.


Supercomputing simulation reveals weaknesses in HIV-1 defense

July 26, 2022

Supercomputers at an NSF site in Texas

A study led by Prof. Gregory Voth, Dept. of Chemistry, ran the first realistic simulations of how the HIV capsid stabilizes and forms. "The vulnerabilities in the armor of the HIV-1 virus capsid were revealed by the simulations and analyses we did," said Voth. The realistic model could result in better understanding of the infection process and improved treatments.


A new look at disordered carbon

July 21, 2022

Unlike diamonds (left) and graphite, amorphous carbon (right) has no crystalline structure,

A team of scientists led by physics professor Giulia Galli have utilized a new framework for understanding the electronic properties of amorphous carbon. Their findings let scientists better predict how the material conducts electricity and absorbs light.


The new science coming from the James Webb telescope has astronomers giddy

July 21, 2022

A man takes a cellphone picture of the James Webb Space Telescope images being shown to Times Square.

Assoc. Prof. Jacob Bean of astronomy and astrophysics expresses to NPR his excitement at the James Webb Space Telescope's view of the planet GJ 1214b—“my favorite planet” of study for ten years.


UChicago Data Science Institute announces founding industry affiliates

July 15, 2022

Mike Franklin speaking at the DSI Summit

The University of Chicago Data Science Institute launched its Industry Affiliates Program with four founding core members from the sectors of finance, insurance, and telecommunications: American Family Insurance, DRW Holdings LLC, Prudential Financial, and Verizon Communications.


Enlightened: Kenneth Sembach, AB’88, leads the mission to find the universe’s first light

July 14, 2022

Kenneth Sembach

UChicago Magazine profiles Kenneth Sembach, AB’88, the director of the Space Telescope Science Institute, the NASA-contracted nonprofit organization responsible for Webb’s flight and science operations.


Awarded time with the JWST, astronomers from Northwestern and UChicago are over the moon

July 14, 2022

Jacob Bean

What can the James Webb Space Telescope show us about exoplanets? Prof. Jacob Bean, Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, is co-leading a team of about 150 scientists thrilled to access new data to shed light on their composition, atmospheres, and habitability.


NASA’s new flagship telescope just released its beautiful first images of the universe

July 12, 2022

cosmic cloud captured by James Webb Space Telescope

Nebulas and galaxy clusters are among the first batch of images from James Webb Space Telescope, the successor to Hubble. “These are some of the sharpest images of the universe ever taken by humanity,” said University of Chicago astrophysicist Michael Gladders.