Assistant Prof Kourkoutis receives NSF CAREER Award
Lena Kourkoutis, assistant professor and Rebecca Q. and James C. Morgan Sesquicentennial Faculty Fellow (AEP), has received a CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation. Read more
Selected news pieces highlighting accomplishments of the School of Applied and Engineering Physics faculty, students and alumni.
Lena Kourkoutis, assistant professor and Rebecca Q. and James C. Morgan Sesquicentennial Faculty Fellow (AEP), has received a CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation. Read more
Wang, a Ph.D. candidate in the Xu Group, won the JenLab Young Investigator Award for Best Paper at SPIE Photonics West Read more
An 18-foot-long pod engineered by a team that included Cornell students was put to the test during Hyperloop Competition Weekend, Jan. 27-30, at the SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California. Read more
Wise’s Group has been researching the propagation of short pulses of light within multimode fibers. Read more
Study probes how DNA unwrapping and the release of protein are linked inside the macromolecular complex known as the nucleosome core particle, which could inform therapeutic strategies for cancer. Read more
Researchers from Cornell and the University of Virginia collaborated at the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source in an effort to better understand the chemistry behind solar cells. Read more
After 30 years and more than 500 peer-reviewed publications, the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source's CLEO detector has been removed and will resume data-collection at Jefferson Lab in Virginia. Read more
Speed, sensitivity and dynamic range will enable multichannel atomic-scale imaging and analysis of material properties such as electric and magnetic fields Read more
CHESS Director Joel Brock explains how the lab is undergoing an upgrade to create a higher energy, higher flux beam for x-ray production. Read more
Nature talks to Chris Xu, AEP professor, and other scientists coming up with innovative ways to get high-resolution pictures of the whole brain at work. Read more