2024
Using electricity, scientists find promising new method of boosting chemical reactions
January 3, 2024
Asst. Prof. Anna Wuttig and her team found a way to use electricity to boost a type of chemical reaction often used in synthesizing new candidates for pharmaceutical drugs, which may lay the foundation for greener chemistry.
Targeting “undruggable” proteins that drive cancer
January 3, 2024
Cancers are often driven by proteins created by specific oncogenes. Drugs aimed at these proteins take advantage of their surface configurations to latch on and prevent them from interfering with cells, but some families of proteins lack pockets or crevices on their surfaces that the drugs can use. Attacking them is like climbing up a wall with no footholds. For decades, these proteins have been considered “undruggable,” but chemist Raymond Moellering is working to change that.
Eighteen UChicago faculty members receive named, distinguished service professorships in 2024
January 3, 2024
Three computer science professors have received named professorships: Henry Hoffmann, Bo Li, and Ce Zhang.
What astronomers are learning from the James Webb Space Telescope
January 3, 2024
In a WBEZ Morning Edition audio segment, astrophysicist Jacob Bean discusses the initial research frenzy following the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope and the process of settling into a reasonable pace.
How to create a black hole out of thin air
January 3, 2024
In a NYT article, astrophysicist Daniel Holz discusses new research that shows black holes may form in different ways than expected.
CS Assistant Professor Robert Rand receives Air Force Young Investigator Grant
January 3, 2024
The three-year, $450,000 grant will fund Rand’s work on formal verification of the ZX-calculus, a graphical system for representing quantum programs.
Fermilab’s ‘muon shot’ could see suburban lab become site of revolutionary particle collider
January 3, 2024
Prof. Abigail Vieregg discusses the possible construction of a new particle collider, one more powerful than any ever created, at Fermilab.
Photo by Ryan Postel / Fermilab
PSD Spotlight: Josh Kurutz
January 3, 2024
The PSD January Spotlight is Josh Kurutz, NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) Facility Manager, Chemistry Department.
"My most recent but ill-fated creative project was a ballet about chemical elements."
2023
New technique could make modeling molecules much easier
December 15, 2023
Chemists Daniel Gibney, David Mazziotti, and Jan-Niklas Boyn invented a new way to allow computers to simulate certain quantum mechanical effects in complex electronic materials with far less effort.
What to read and watch over winter break 2023
December 14, 2023
UChicago teaching award winners, including Michael Gladders, Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics and Quantrell Award winner, share their selections for the holidays.
Their budget already stretched near bursting, U.S. particle physicists dream small
December 14, 2023
Prof. John Carlstrom discusses funding for CMB-S4, which, he says, would scrutinize the cosmic microwave background for evidence that the newborn universe underwent an exponential growth spurt called inflation.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs measure lifting Illinois’ moratorium on new nuclear power plants
December 14, 2023
Of a moratorium on building nuclear power plants in Illinois coming to an end, Prof. Robert Rosner says in a Chicago Tribune article, "There’s no one waiting here to start building a nuclear power plant as soon as the law changes."
Committee lays out research priorities for future of U.S. particle physics
December 11, 2023
P5 report includes UChicago, Fermilab experiments to study neutrinos, cosmic microwave background.
Chicago Booth announces a new joint degree with applied data science
December 8, 2023
Students can better prepare themselves for a career in a data and A.I.-driven world with the school’s new joint MBA and MS-ADS degree program.
UChicago, NCAR research suggests world will see ‘record-breaking’ winds
December 8, 2023
Jet streams circulate around the world. A new study by GS Prof. Tiffany Shaw and National Center for Atmospheric Research scientist Osamu Miyawaki finds fast jet stream winds (those in dark red in the figure) will get even faster over time as climate change accelerates.