News: 2022

August

Scientists prepare to send a balloon to search for ‘messengers from outer space’

August 23, 2022

Two scientists review a partially assembled fluorescence telescope

NASA has awarded $4.3 million for the final phase of construction and flight of the Extreme Universe Space Observatory on a Super Pressure Balloon (EUSO-SPB2) experiment led by Prof. Angela Olinto, Dept. of Astronomy and Astrophysics. Sending a scientific balloon to 110,000 feet above Earth will enable a search for tiny, ultra-high-energy cosmic ray particles and neutrinos.


Fellowship helps College student launch career in aerospace industry

August 22, 2022

Audrey Scott

Third-year Audrey Scott is one of 51 undergrads to earn a competitive Brooke Owens Fellowship. Read about her summer research at Ball Aerospace in Boulder, CO.


Here’s why Earth just had its shortest day on record

August 22, 2022

Earth from space

Geophysical sciences graduate student, Sasha Warren, writes in Scientific American how wind, ice, and rock may have combined to give our planet its shortest day.


Meet Dieter Gruen, renowned scientist and innovator

August 19, 2022

Dieter M. Gruen

Dieter M. Gruen, Physics PhD’51, is a 99-year-old scientist who fled Nazi Germany, worked on the atomic bomb, and continues to push the bounds of alternative energy technology. 


Watch Wendy Freedman, John Mather, and Janna Levin discuss JWST at Pioneer Works

August 19, 2022

Wendy Freedman

In a discussion at Pioneer Works in Brooklyn, NY, Nobel laureate John Mather, senior project scientist of JWST, and astronomer Wendy Freedman of the University of Chicago, a previous chair of the Giant Magellan Telescope’s board of directors, talked about the past, present and future of JWST with Columbia University theoretical cosmologist Janna Levin, director of sciences at Pioneer Works.


Black hole collisions could help us measure how fast the universe is expanding

August 18, 2022

Black holes colliding illustration

In a new study, astrophysicists Prof. Daniel Holz and Jose María Ezquiaga, a NASA Einstein and KICP Fellow, laid out a method for how to use pairs of colliding black holes to measure how fast our universe is expanding.


To map the human brain, researchers first look to the octopus

August 17, 2022

a red octopus

Prof. Peter Littlewood, Dept. of Physics, and his collaborators at Argonne National Laboratory used supercomputing power to image the neuronal architecture of the octopus in an attempt to reverse-engineer its brain and understand how it functions.


Prof. Nakamura comments, The U.S. could see a new ‘extreme heat belt’ by 2053

August 16, 2022

Graphic of US map showing orange shades of heat rise above 125 degrees for more than two day, mostly in middle of country, projected for 2053.

Prof. Noboru Nakamura, Dept. of the Geophysical Sciences, comments on a new report that uses hyperlocal data and climate projections to show that cities as far north as Chicago could have many more days of extreme heat each year.


Building the quantum workforce of tomorrow

August 15, 2022

A man and a woman share a laptop and are in discussion

A new certificate course at the University of Chicago prepares workers to join the quantum industry.


Meteorite provides record of asteroids ‘spitting out’ pebbles

August 15, 2022

black and white asteroid

Research led by Prof. Philipp Heck, the Robert A. Pritzker Curator of Meteoritics at Chicago’s Field Museum, and geophysical sciences graduate student, Xin Yang, explains strange particle ejection behavior seen in 2019 on the Bennu asteroid.


NPR’s Short Wave interviews Sadie Witowski: Making audio magic with math

August 15, 2022

Carry the Two podcast logo, pink and black letters mirror each other

NPR’s Short Wave radio show interviews Sadie Witowski of the Institute for Mathematical and Statistical Innovation about their new math podcast, Carry the Two.


UChicago co-leads $10 million NSF institute on foundations of data science

August 11, 2022

The black and white logo for IDEAL, a regional consortium for computer science and applied data analysis.

New funding from NSF will grow the IDEAL consortium of more than 60 regional researchers in computer science, statistics, mathematics and electrical engineering. Main research topics of interest include the foundations of machine learning, high-dimensional data analysis and inference, and data science and society, including emerging issues of reliability, fairness, privacy and interpretability.


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.