News: 2021

August

2011 paper co-authored by Prof. Hank Hoffmann receives Test of Time honor

August 24, 2021

Hank Hoffman

In 2011, a team of MIT researchers including UChicago associate professor Hank Hoffmann (then a graduate student) proposed a “loop perforation” algorithm that gave computers a generalizable option to go off-script and sacrifice accuracy in favor of performance. Though the paper was controversial when originally presented at FSE (The ACM Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering), its tradeoff principles have since become widespread in computer science. To celebrate this forward-thinking research, FSE recently awarded Hoffmann and his co-authors Stelios Sidiroglou, Sasa Misailovic, and Martin Rinard the honorable mention in their annual Test of Time award.


Meet chemistry student, Elizabeth Wells Kelley

August 23, 2021

Elizabeth Wells Kelley

Elizabeth Wells Kelley was born and raised in Mechanicsville, Virginia. Before coming to the University of Chicago, she earned a bachelor's in chemistry at the College of William & Mary, where she was a research assistant, teaching assistant, and tutor. She is starting her fifth year in the Department of Chemistry doctoral program. She has taken time off during her program to teach high school chemistry at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools. Now returned to her research, she works on organic synthesis and the scientific investigation of how humans learn, teach, and interact with chemistry.
 


The secret Nazi past and billionaire future of U.S. space innovation, podcast with Jordan Bimm

August 20, 2021

Jordan Bimm

In this latest episode of the podcast Big Brains, space historian Jordan Bimm examines our militaristic relationship to the stars, and how it still shapes our future.


New startup from CS Prof. Fred Chong and Pranav Gokhale, PhD’20, builds software to make quantum computing faster

August 18, 2021

CS Professor Fred Chong and his quantum startup partner and former advisee Pranav Gokhale

Just out of stealth, Seymour Goodman Professor of Computer Science Fred Chong and Pranav Gokhale, PhD’20, have a new startup for software that makes quantum computing faster. Part of Duality, the first accelerator in the U.S. for quantum startups, Super.tech is building software to power next-gen quantum computing.


How a genetic breakthrough could address global hunger, podcast with Chuan He

August 9, 2021

Chuan He

The University of Chicago podcast network interviews PSD biochemist Chuan He about his breakthrough discovery manipulating RNA for higher yields and greater drought resistance in rice and potatoes, for "Big Brains Podcast: How a genetic breakthrough could address global hunger."


Brian Nord envisions hybrid analysis method, applying AI to cosmology

August 4, 2021

Headshot of Nord

Fermi and UChicago Kavli scientist Brian Nord has envisioned a new hybrid data-analysis method that was awarded funding by the Department of Energy. It integrates both the strengths of machine learning and the interpretations of statistics. His new method could potentially advance how scientists approach cosmology.


UChicago researchers excel in IBM Quantum Open Science Challenge

August 3, 2021

A blue and green diagram of the unit cells of a heavy-hex lattice, the topology of all active IBM Quantum devices.

Two UChicago-affiliated researchers came out on top at the IBM Quantum Open Science Challenge — Alexey Galda for the graph state challenge and Pranav Gokhale for the SWAP gate challenge. The first-of-its-kind challenge presented two targets to the research community and offered prize money and experimental time on their quantum computer as rewards. 


Noel Swerdlow, one of the ‘greatest scholars’ of the history of science, 1941-2021

August 2, 2021

Noel Swerdlow

Prof. Emeritus Noel M. Swerdlow of the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, a distinguished historian of science and the world’s foremost expert on Ptolemy and Copernicus, died July 24. He was 79.
 


PSD in the News - July 2021

August 2, 2021

PSD against a white and turquoise background

This month PSD researchers have been featured for their efforts to understand how manipulating RNA can allow plants to yield dramatically more crops and increase drought tolerance, explain why planets with oxygenated atmospheres like ours could host alien life, and extol what billionaires mean for the changing arc of aerospace history. And, a Nobel-winning biochemist, Jack Szostak, will join the faculty in 2022.


Chicago Quantum Exchange adds new international and regional partners

August 2, 2021

(From left): Prof. Roland Kawakami, Dr. Camelia Seclu, Prof. Chris Hammel and Prof. Jay Gupta (not shown) in the lab at The Ohio State University.

The Chicago Quantum Exchange, a growing hub for the research and development of quantum technology that is based at the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering, has added to its community two world-leading research institutions at the forefront of quantum information science and engineering: the Weizmann Institute of Science and The Ohio State University.


July

Nobel Prize-winning biochemist Jack Szostak to join University of Chicago faculty

July 27, 2021

Jack Szostak in a blue sweater, grey blazer, standing in a lab

Nobel Prize-winning biochemist Jack Szostak will join the Department of Chemistry faculty, effective Sept. 1, 2022. A pioneering scholar of genetics who examines the biochemical origins of life, Szostak shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2009. He will become the 24th person to hold a University Professorship, and the 11th active faculty member holding that title.


Neubauer Prof. Ben Zhao discusses online privacy and de-anonymization on MSNBC

July 26, 2021

Ben Zhao speaking to MSNBC

The outing of a top Catholic official using supposedly anonymous data from his cell phone is raising questions about privacy. NBC’s Joshua Johnson asks Ben Zhao, Neubauer Professor of Computer Science, to explain the practice of de-anonymization and whether or not you need to be concerned about your data.


Blase Ur and Daniel Fabrycky recommend summer reading, alongside other teaching award winners

July 26, 2021

Three UChicago students reading books at Promontory Point

In an annual summer reading list, Assistant Professor Blase Ur and Associate Professor Daniel Fabrycky recommend summer reading, alongside other 2021 teaching award winners.


RNA breakthrough creates crops that can grow 50% more potatoes, rice

July 22, 2021

Two rice plants side by side, demonstrating dramatic growth difference from RNA manipulated sample

Manipulating RNA can allow plants to yield dramatically more crops, as well as increasing drought tolerance, announced a group of scientists from the University of Chicago, Peking University and Guizhou University. The discovery of the exciting and simple modification was co-led by John T. Wilson Distinguished Service Professor of Chemistry, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Chuan He.
 


Meet computational and applied mathematics student, Adela DePavia

July 21, 2021

Adela DePavia

Adela DePavia was born and raised in Houston, Texas, and Northern California’s East Bay Area. After finishing undergrad in 2019, she spent a year on a research fellowship before joining the Committee on Computational and Applied Mathematics (CCAM) program at UChicago. Soon starting her second year, she studies connections between discrete and continuous time optimization, and optimization on manifolds.