October
Three UChicago scientists named 2022 fellows of American Physical Society Scholars
October 19, 2022
Profs. David Mazziotti, Jiwoong Park, and David Schuster have been named 2022 fellows of the American Physical Society Scholars and recognized for contributions to atomically-thin materials, electron structure methods, and quantum networks.
Watch President Obama surprise students at Chicago Quantum Exchange event
October 19, 2022
Former President Barack Obama sent a jolt of electricity through Chicago Quantum Exchange in Hyde Park. Students from Kenwood Academy were on a field trip to learn about the future of communication when Obama suddenly appeared during a career panel. Watch FOX32 News coverage.
The next stage of cosmic microwave background research
October 19, 2022
With CMB-S4, scientists including UChicago cosmologists John Carlstrom and Jeff McMahon hope to connect a sandy desert with a polar desert—and revolutionize our understanding of the early universe.
PSD Spotlight: Arnab Bose
October 19, 2022
Meet Arnab Bose, a clinical associate professor and the online program director of the Master’s of Science in Applied Data Science program at the University of Chicago. Read about his experiences at ITT in India, reflections on his academic and industry successes, and visions for the UChicago Applied Data Science graduate program.
PSD Spotlight: Shawn Manner
October 18, 2022
PSD’s October spotlight is Shawn Manner, administrative assistant to Professor John Carlstrom of the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics. Shawn is from Michigan City, Indiana, and has been with the University of Chicago since February 2022.
Asst. Prof. Weixin Tang, Dept. of Chemistry, named a 2022 Packard Fellow
October 18, 2022
Neubauer Family Assistant Professor Weixin Tang, Dept. of Chemistry, was named a 2022 Packard Fellow. The award will support her research to develop a mammalian biology-compatible, adaptation-ready directed evolution strategy to isolate biomolecules for therapeutic discovery.
Meet astronomy and astrophysics student, Dhayaa Anbajagane
October 17, 2022
Dhayaa Anbajagane was raised in the coastal city of Madras in India. He earned a bachelor’s in physics at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He has spent two years as a graduate student in the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics where he uses observations made by large telescopes to study the initial state of the Universe and its subsequent evolution into what we see on the sky today.
Her work helped her boss win the Nobel Prize. Now the spotlight is on her
October 17, 2022
UChicago research assistant, Donna DeEtte Elbert, was a “computer” for Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar and shared authorship with the Nobel laureate on 18 papers. Her pivotal finding about planetary magnetic fields existed for years as a footnote in his work—until recently.
An AIP Oral History with Prof. Wendy Freedman
October 17, 2022
In this American Institute of Physics oral history, Prof. Wendy Freedman, Dept. of Astronomy and Astrophysics, describes her upbringing in Canada, astronomy training in Toronto, research topics, and leadership in NASA telescope projects.
These tiny ultra-porous crystals could transform cancer treatments and more
October 17, 2022
How can super-porous metal organic frameworks (MOFs) advance healthcare? Prof. Wenbin Lin, Dept. of Chemistry, has spent two decades inventing MOFs that can enhance the effect of the radiation in tumor cells without amplifying damage to normal cells.
Climate policy must transition from goal setting to implementation, say former U.S. and Chinese climate negotiators
October 14, 2022
Read about the kickoff event for the UChicago-Peking University Joint Forum on Addressing the Climate and Energy Challenge, a 5-part virtual forum open to the public.
Using quantum data to create an unhackable Internet: ‘We’re getting close,’ University of Chicago expert leading project says
October 14, 2022
A profile of the Chicago quantum network project. “What we’re looking at is: Can you transmit info in a secure way that is immune to hacking and protects your personal and privacy?” says Prof. David Awschalom, Dept. of Physics. “We’re getting close.”
Black holes, explained
October 13, 2022
Black holes fascinate both the public and scientists—they push the limits of our understanding about matter, space and time. Read more about them in this UChicago News Explainer Series,
Common deidentification methods don’t fully protect data privacy, study finds
October 13, 2022
In an award-winning paper, Asst. Prof. Aloni Cohen, Dept. of Computer Science and Data Science, described a new kind of attack called “downcoding” and warns that the most popular data transformations intended to anonymize should not be considered sufficient to protect individuals’ privacy.
Latinxs and Hispanics in the Mathematical Sciences honors David Uminsky
October 13, 2022
For Hispanic Hertiage Month, the group Latinxs and Hispanics in the Mathematical Sciences (Lathisms) spotlighted David Uminsky, the director of the Data Science Institute.