Computational work uses a Chicago neighborhood to understand and quantify climate effects on building energy use from changes in urban design.
Computational work uses a Chicago neighborhood to understand and quantify climate effects on building energy use from changes in urban design.
Division of Undergraduate Education program aims to bridge classroom learning with future career opportunities
A new way of representing river-groundwater exchanges paves the way for next-generation river network modeling.
Researchers find that fungal spores are most abundant during initial growth, while bacteria predominate during flowering and fruit development.
Monica Daley studies avian ground movement to help people with mobility issues
Machine Learning offers New Insights and New Parameterization for the path from Drizzle Drops to Warm Rain
Biological production of acetone and isopropanol by gas fermentation captures more carbon than it releases.
Mathematician Svetlana Jitomirskaya, vision researcher Krzysztof Palczewski honored
Adapted from a news release by Robert Sanders When scientists announced the complete sequence of the human genome in 2003, they were fudging a bit. In fact, nearly 20 years later, about 8% of the genome has never been fully sequenced, largely because it consists of highly repetitive chunks of DNA that are hard to