The project will work to reach 2,000 students and educators with National Science Foundation-funded ACCESS high-performance computing resources for disaster response.
Led by Texas A&M archaeologists and supported by the U.S. Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, the mission combines underwater technology with humanitarian effort to identify aviators lost in the Baltic Sea.
From comparing healthcare systems abroad to examining oceanic microfauna at home in College Station, Aggies gain transformational opportunities through research, internships and global experiences, pushing them beyond the bounds of a conventional undergraduate education.
Texas A&M doctoral student Yair Andre Cuenú-Mosquera transforms his lived experiences and cultural roots into scholarship that uplifts Afro-Colombian voices while building a bridge between academics and the world beyond.
Swift observations with the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (ESO’s VLT) have revealed the explosive death of a star just as the blast was breaking through the star’s surface. For the first time, astronomers unveiled the shape of the explosion at its earliest, fleeting stage. This brief initial phase wouldn’t have been observable a day later and helps address a whole set of questions about how massive stars go supernova.
Wen, a member of Dr. Jeremy Holt’s dense matter group and the Cyclotron Institute, is Texas A&M’s inaugural recipient of the award recognizing graduate research excellence and potential impact in the scientific community.
Faculty who are newly appointed or reappointed to endowed chairs, professorships or fellowships and their generous benefactors were recognized with one of the highest honors in academia and presented with commemorative bronze medallions.
After nearly a decade in museum technology, Raymond Hinton is using signal processing and statistical modeling at Texas A&M to uncover new insights in fields ranging from biomedical research to sustainable transportation.
Bonsall S. Wilton ’72 established an endowment to expand undergraduate research opportunities and strengthen the Department of Biology’s hands-on learning mission.
First responders are exactly what they sound like: they are the first on the scene of all disasters, both local and national. Due to some of the haunting images they encounter, roughly 10% of them suffer from PTSD. Dr. Anka Vujanovic, from the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences aims to change that.
Armed with $27 million in funding and a cross-disciplinary approach,scientists in the Texas A&M College of Arts and Sciences are uncovering how biology, behavior and the environment intertwine in the fight against dementia.
The Cyclotron Institute’s radiation effects testing program has established Texas A&M as the premier location in not only the U.S. but also the world at which to do testing of heavy ion interactions with electronics, an important safeguard for both commercial and military satellites as well as space missions.