November
Prof. Giulia Galli receives ISSNAF 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award
November 1, 2022
![Picture of Prof. Galli sitting at her office desk, resting chin on one hand and smiling at camera.](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
Liew Family Professor Giulia Galli recieved the ISSNAF Lifetime Achievement Award which acknowledges outstanding individuals of Italian origin who, thanks to their pioneering spirit and lifetime commitment, have honored their country of origin and given a significant contribution to research, leadership, and mentorship in any field.
Advanced nanoparticles provide new weapon to fight difficult cancers
November 1, 2022
![Nanoparticle creation illustration](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
Researchers including chemist Wenbin Lin use nanoparticles to deliver a bacterially derived compound that targets the STING pathway to suppress tumor growth and metastasis by disrupting blood vessels and stimulating immune response.
October
Blocking sounds could help you experience VR in a more immersive way
October 31, 2022
![A woman wearing VR goggles reaches to the sky](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
Assoc. Prof. Pedro Lopes, Dept. of Computer Science, and his team have developed a hardware prototype to keep users enveloped in a virtual experience. The small box attached to a VR headset detects distractions like winds or a sudden ray of sunshine hitting one's skin.
UChicago researchers take inspiration from soil to create new material with promise for medical, biofuel technology
October 28, 2022
![a microscopic view of a soil-like material appearing pink and white against a blue background](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
Chemist Bozhi Tian’s latest experiment mimics the structure of soil to create materials that can interact with their environment, with promise for electronics, medicine, and biofuel technology.
Spray-on ‘metallic’ plastic could be used for wearable electronics
October 27, 2022
![Chemist John Anderson reaches towards equipment in his science lab](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
Assoc. Prof. John Anderson of chemistry has discovered a material that can be made like plastic, but conducts electricity more like metal. The breakthrough could point to a new class of materials for electronics, devices.
Discovering the highest energy particles from the top of the Greenland Ice Sheet
October 27, 2022
![Kaeli Hughes and Abigail Vieregg at White Mountain Research Station in California](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
Prof. Abigail Vieregg, Depts. of Physics and Astronomy and Astrophysics, has been awarded $1.25M from the Moore Foundation for instrumentation development to advance the detection of the highest energy neutrinos in ice sheets and build a more complete picture of the dynamic high-energy universe.
Marcela Carena named DOE Office of Science Distinguished Scientist Fellow
October 26, 2022
![Marcela Carena](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
Prof. Marcela Carena, Dept. of Physics, and of Fermi National Laboratory has been selected by The Department of Energy as one of two national laboratory scientists to be named DOE Office of Science Distinguished Scientist Fellows.
PSD in the news - October 2022
October 26, 2022
![PSD against a white and turquoise background](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
This month PSD researchers were featured for their efforts to test an unhackable internet, develop metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) to transform cancer treatments, and design and build the next generation telescope called CMB-S4.
New technique to determine age will open new era of planetary science, researchers say
October 26, 2022
![meteorite close up](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
A group with UChicago and the Field Museum tested an instrument made by Thermo Fisher Scientific on a piece of a Martian meteorite and were able to accurately and easily date the rock using strontium isotopes.
New Schmidt Futures fellowship at UChicago to foster next generation of AI-driven scientists
October 26, 2022
![Prof. Rebecca Willett (center) will serve as the faculty lead of the new fellowship program. Profs. David Freedman (left) and Joshua Frieman will serve as faculty co-leads.](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
A new University of Chicago initiative, the Eric and Wendy Schmidt AI in Science Postdoctoral Fellowship, a program of Schmidt Futures, will train the next generation of scientists combining research in both AI and science fields, including physics, astronomy and biology.
New UpDown Project uses “intelligent data movement” to accelerate graph analytics
October 25, 2022
![A figure from computer science research on speeding up graphing analytics](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
With a $9.2 million grant from IARPA, Andrew A. Chien will lead a team of UChicago CS researchers building the UpDown System, a new approach that could speed up graph analytics a hundredfold.
UChicago research tests whether robots or humans are better game partners
October 25, 2022
![Participants played with either (a) a robot game guide or (b) a human game guide in a series of games and puzzles.](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
Students Ting-Han Lin and Spencer Ng together with Asst. Prof. Sarah Sebo, Dept. of Computer Science, presented research inspired by interactive amusement park animatronics and escape rooms to test people’s preferences for human versus robot game guides.
Student uses NASA data to reveal new details on planets in other solar systems
October 24, 2022
![The Kepler telescope](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
A study by undergraduate student Jared Siegel, UChicago ’22, will be published by The Astrophysical Journal and sets upper limits on the masses of 50 exoplanets. He conducted his research with Asst. Prof. Leslie Rogers, Dept. of Astronomy and Astrophysics.
Rock scooped off speeding asteroid suggests it was once comet that lost its tail
October 24, 2022
![an illustration depicting the Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa2 as it touched down on the asteroid.](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
An analysis of rock scooped directly from the surface of an asteroid by a Japanese spacecraft suggests Ryugu originally formed alongside the ice giants Neptune and Uranus and spent time circling the sun as a comet before making its way to the asteroid belt near Earth.
Asst. Prof. Leslie Rogers on award-winning team for Scialog: Signatures of Life in the Universe
October 20, 2022
![Leslie Rogers](https://d3qi0qp55mx5f5.cloudfront.net/shared-resources/i/template/transparent.gif)
Assistant Professor Leslie Rogers, Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and the College, is part of an interdisciplinary team that has been awarded a Scialog: Signatures of Life in the Universe Award to pursue innovative research on how volatile reservoirs within planets inform life outside the Solar System.