News: Faculty

2021

Asst. Prof. Edwin Kite finds exoplanets may have water-rich atmospheres

March 15, 2021

An artist's illustration of the exoplanet WASP-121b, which appears to have water in its atmosphere.

Assistant Professor of the Geophysical Sciences Edwin Kite has co-authored a paper finding there might be many planets with water-rich atmospheres. His study finds way that hot, rocky planets in other systems could form and keep atmospheres.


Using powerful lasers, scientists recreate how magnetic fields grow in clusters of galaxies

March 15, 2021

A colorful simulation showing the growth of magnetic fields through laboratory plasmas.

An international collaboration co-led by UChicago managed to recreate—for the first time in the laboratory—the growth of magnetic fields at extreme conditions similar to those in the hot plasma that fills clusters of galaxies. Using powerful lasers, the pioneering experiments capture how physical process called turbulent dynamo grows these fields.


Prof. Krishnan develops precision diagnostics for Alzheimer’s using patented DNA nanotech

March 10, 2021

Yamuna Krishnan

Professor of Chemistry Yamuna Krishnan founded start up Esya Labs with funding from UChicago Polsky. The pioneering effort develops tools for the early, precise, and cost-effective detection of neurodegenerative diseases to support drug discovery and personalized medicine efforts.


Core Knowledge from UChicago News: The solar wind, explained

March 10, 2021

This article from UChicago News explains the solar wind, or the complex swirls and eddies of particles that travel about a million miles per hour as they pass Earth. Famous UChicago astrophysicist Eugene Parker first hypothesized solar wind and now current research by Profs. Olinto and Rosner carry this work forward.


Bacteria know how to exploit quantum mechanics, UChicago study finds

March 10, 2021

illustration of magnified orange bacteria on green backdrop

Bacteria know how to exploit quantum mechanics, UChicago study authored by Professor Greg Engel finds. Photosynthetic bacteria adapt to environment by using quantum mechanics to steer energy.


UChicago physicist William Irvine selected for inaugural Brown Investigator Award

March 8, 2021

William Irvine

The Brown Science Foundation today announced physicists David Hsieh of Caltech and William Irvine of the University of Chicago as recipients of the inaugural Brown Investigator Award. The award, which recognizes curiosity-driven basic research in chemistry and physics, supports the investigators’ research with $2 million over five years to their respective universities. Hsieh and Irvine were nominated by their institutions and chosen from a candidate pool of mid-career scientists at 10 top-rated research universities.
 


Scientists confirm third-nearest star with a planet—and it’s rocky like Earth

March 4, 2021

Illustration of a planet's terrain, orange with black mountains

UChicago team that built MAROON-X instrument confirm third-nearest star with a planet—and it’s rocky like Earth.
 


UChicago Global Digest spotlights geophysical scientist Clara Blättler

March 4, 2021

Clara Blattler on a throne of fossils

UChicago Global Digest spotlights geophysical scientist Clara Blättler in a faculty profile.


The statistician in the library: Stephen Stigler’s four decades crossing disciplinary lines

March 1, 2021

headshot of Stephen Stigler, taken in front of a white building. Stigler is wearing a suit.

Prof. Stephen Stigler retired after over forty years at the University of Chicago. Over his long career, he has investigated the history of the development of mathematics and statistical methods, in relation to problems in many fields—from astronomy to medicine to social sciences and psychology. 


UChicago, Argonne scientists zero in on molecules that could fight COVID-19

February 26, 2021

Krysten Jones in a chemistry lab

A unique partnership among biologists, chemists and X-ray scientists at the University of Chicago and Argonne National Laboratory has zeroed in on several molecules that could be used to create drugs to fight COVID-19.


Beneath the AVS Surface spotlights chemist Rachael Farber, PhD

February 26, 2021

Rachael Farber

Chemist Rachael Farber, PhD, the Kadanoff-Rice Postdoctoral Scholar in the Sibener lab, has been featured in Beneath the AVS Surface, a newsletter for the professional society for sciences related to materials, interfaces, and processing.


PSD in the news - February 2021

February 24, 2021

PSD in white against a maroon background

This month, PSD community members have been featured for their work discovering new metamaterials to improve optics for telescopes, designing patterns in self-propelling liquid crystals, and meauring ceramic chips in meteorites to study the early solar system, and more. In case you missed it, review our news headlines from February 2021.


Library staff, astro faculty, and students join forces to drive new astronomical discoveries

February 23, 2021

Prof. Rich Kron and astronomy students on a ladder at an observatory

The University of Chicago Library continues to look to the sky in an ongoing collaboration with Professor Rich Kron, Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, exploring the use of data obtained from historical astronomical glass plates to drive new astronomical discovery.


Prof. Galli’s new research could boost a solar-powered fuel made by splitting water

February 22, 2021

illustration of two magnifying glasses above molecules

Prof. Guilia Galli, a leader in solar fuels, released a new design to optimize photoelectrodes for producing solar fuels. The research could boost a solar-powered fuel made by splitting water.
 


Marianna Csörnyei named 2022 AWM-AMS Noether Lecturer

February 19, 2021

Marianna Csörnyei

Prof. Marianna Csörnyei has been named the Association for Women in Mathematics and the American Mathematical Society 2022 Noether Lecturer. The honor acknowledges Csörnyei’s significant contributions to several areas of mathematical analysis, including geometric measure theory, functional analysis and real analysis.