Amaya Moro-Martint will present her lecture in the Greenewalt Lecture Hall at Carnegie's Broad Branch Road Campus. Coffee, tea, and a light breakfast will be served before the lecture, at 10:30 a.m.
After a traditional research-oriented PhD and post-doc in plant sciences, Mary spent 14 years as a professor at Harvey Mudd, a small liberal arts college. During this time she developed many ...
In 2017 the first confirmed interstellar object to pass through the solar system, 1I/'Oumuamua, was discovered. The existence of comets of interstellar origin had long been expected, but 'Oumuamua ...
Tip growth is an extreme form of intrinsic self-organizing polar growth that generates tubular cells, while its growth axis is controlled by external vectorial cues such as gradients of attractants in ...
I graduated with a PhD in molecular and cellular biology from Washington University and then moved onto a postdoctoral position at Stanford, working on protein aggregation in the context of ...
The use of lasers to induce extreme compression states has enabled the study of material properties and equations of state at unprecedented pressure and temperature conditions. By carefully designing ...
Dennis Kent will present his lecture in the Greenewalt Lecture Hall at Carnegie's Broad Branch Road Campus. Coffee, tea, and a light breakfast will be served before the lecture, at 10:30 a.m.
Join us Thursday mornings throughout October for seminars on the theme of redox controls on planetary processes. Dan Frost of Bayreuth Geoinstitut will kick the series off with a presentation entitled ...
Melissa Grady Trainer is at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center's Sciences and Exploration Directorate and is Deputy Principal Investigator for the Dragonfly mission to Saturn's moon Titan. She will ...
Former DTM Harry Oscar Wood Fellow Nicholas Schmerr (2008-2010), now an Assistant Professor at the Department of Geology, University of Maryland, received his Ph.D. from Arizona State University. His ...
John McCutcheon is an HHMI Investigator, Associate Center Director, and Professor at Arizona State University ...
Our sense of touch is the earliest to develop, last to fade, and least understood of the five basic senses. The gentlest breeze and the roughest sandpaper are detected by mechanoreceptor neurons ...