Texas A&M doctoral student Lauren Berger is using a prestigious NASA grant to study Mars' dune formations and uncover secrets about the planet’s environment and wind patterns.
Mark your calendar for free family fun and experience the many wonders of science and technology at the Texas A&M Physics and Engineering Festival featuring hands-on demonstrations, keynote lectures, the iconic Texas-sized five-barrel depth charge and more.
From tracking storms on a farm in North Texas to decoding weather extremes with AI, Juliette Rocha is on a mission to extend the limits of weather predictability.
Texas A&M doctoral student Sahir Gagan is exploring how tiny plastic particles and dangerous chemicals in the air could impact our health and the environment.
Dr. Catharina Laporte, a cultural anthropologist and instructional professor in the Department of Anthropology, explores the cultural significance of kissing, examining its evolution across time — and how, in some cultures, kissing doesn't exist at all.
Learn from some of the best in the STEM professions and Aggieland as part of this year's event, "Breaking Boundaries: Pushing the Limits of STEM Exploration," set for Saturday, Feb. 22, in Room 2400 of the Memorial Student Center.
A showcase of talent and opportunity, Texas A&M’s Economics Career Night connected prominent organizations with over 100 of the next generation of industry leaders.
Dr. Margaret Ezell, a distinguished professor in the Department of English, explores the parallels between 17th and 18th century manuscript culture and today's social media platforms in her most recent, open-access publication Early English Periodicals and Early Modern Social Media.
Dr. Wencai Liu is one of 12 scholars worldwide to receive a prestigious mathematics professorship, granting him the opportunity to collaborate with fellow scientists at the University of California, Berkeley.
Dr. Jonathan Carroll '23, who received his Ph.D. from Texas A&M University in military history, became the first Aggie to win the Edward M. Coffman First Manuscript Prize for his dissertation, “God’s Work in Hell: Nation Building and Counterinsurgency in Somalia, 1992-1995.”