2024
Doomsday Clock remains at a minute and a half to midnight in 2024—closest ever to apocalypse
January 25, 2024

Every year, the Bulletin determines how much metaphorical time we have to avert catastrophe for humankind. Over the past 75 years, the hands of the clock have moved according to whether steps were taken to address threats that could end human civilization on Earth, including climate change and nuclear war.
UChicago researchers form new dynamic bio interfaces to aid biosensing and treatment
January 23, 2024

As their recent research in Nature Chemical Engineering demonstrates, the Bozhi Tian lab, led by graduate student Jiuyun Shi, has developed new interfaces that offer adaptability, precision, and targeted interactions with biological components, a discovery that could have significant implications for the future of healthcare.
Doomsday Clock 2024 announcement: What is the new time?
January 23, 2024

The scientists predicting the probability of a worldwide catastrophe have stated that the Doomsday Clock is still at ninety seconds to midnight.
London Evening Standard article notes that the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists was founded in part by UChicago scientists and that the Doomsday Clock is now housed at the University's Harris School of Public Policy.
China’s new dark matter lab is biggest and deepest yet
January 23, 2024

In a Nature article, Physics Prof. Juan Collar comments on dark matter research projects in China.
Nightshade, the free tool that ‘poisons’ AI models, is now available for artists to use
January 23, 2024

Venture Beat article announces that "Nightshade" from the Computer Science Department's SAND Lab is now available for use.
Young-Kee Kim, 2024 APS President, on partnerships at home and abroad
January 23, 2024

In this interview, Kim, the 2024 APS President and the Louis Block Distinguished Service Professor, Physics, talks about her plans for APS and global science.
Stephen Stigler awarded Neumann Prize
January 22, 2024

Stephen Stigler, Ernest DeWitt Burton Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of Statistics, has won the 2023 Neumann Prize for his book Casanova's Lottery: The History of a Revolutionary Game of Chance. The prize is awarded for a book in English (including books in translation) dealing with the history of mathematics, aimed at a non-specialist readership.
UChicago, Caltech study suggests that physical processes can have hidden neural network-like abilities
January 18, 2024

We tend to separate the brain and the muscle—the brain does the thinking; the muscle does the doing. But a new study shows how the molecules that build structures, i.e, the muscle, can themselves do both the thinking and the doing.
Final supernova results from Dark Energy Survey offer unique insights into expansion of universe
January 18, 2024

In 1998, astrophysicists discovered that the universe is expanding at an accelerating rate, attributed to a mysterious entity called dark energy that makes up about 70% of our universe.
Now, 25 years after the initial discovery, the scientists working on the Dark Energy Survey have released the results of an analysis using the same technique to further probe the mysteries of dark energy and the expansion of the universe.
5 ways to instill more joy in higher ed workplaces
January 18, 2024

Kristin McCann, chief of staff and executive director of UChicago's Master's in Data Science, and MSDS colleagues detail five ways of cultivating a more joyful workplace amid the great resignation.
An intellectual environment
January 15, 2024

An interview with the new Director of the Committee on Computational and Applied Mathematics
Guillaume Bal, Professor of Statistics and Mathematics, was named the Director of the Committee on Computational and Applied Mathematics (CCAM), starting July 1, 2023. In this Q&A, he discusses his priorities for the committee, areas of potential growth, and his vision for collaboration.
John Carlstrom awarded Heineman Prize for Astrophysics for ‘pioneering work’
January 12, 2024

Prof. John Carlstrom cited for microwave interferometry and observations of cosmic microwave background.
Scientists find an unusual star that hints at a new way stars can die
January 11, 2024

Discovery by UChicago astrophysicists, including Alex Ji, may change our picture of how stars explode and elements are made.
Inno Under 25: The rising startup leaders to watch in Chicago
January 11, 2024

A Business Journals article lists UChicago undergrads Aarthi Koripelly and Jackson Lee among the Inno Under 25 for their startup Quail.ai, which tied for first place in last year's College New Venture Challenge and participated in the data science accelerator Transform.
Group from CS to present four papers at most prestigious international quantum conference
January 11, 2024

Assistant Professor Bill Fefferman and his group are headed to Taipei to present four works on today’s major quantum topics at QIP’24: the largest and most prestigious quantum computing research conference in the world.