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Rice University geologist Melodie French has earned a National Science Foundation CAREER Award to support her investigation of the tectonic roots of earthquakes and tsunamis. (Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)

Fed grant backs Rice earthquake research

January 31, 2020

Rice University Earth scientist Melodie French earns a prestigious National Science Foundation CAREER Award to support her investigation of the tectonic roots of earthquakes and tsunamis.

Models by Rice University chemists calculate the chemical and mechanical energies involved in “bursty” RNA production in cells. Their models show how RNA polymerases create supercoils of DNA that allow production of RNA that goes on to produce proteins.

Cells’ springy coils pump bursts of RNA

January 30, 2020

Models by Rice chemists calculate the chemical and mechanical energies involved in “bursty” RNA production in cells.

Illustration by Ilenne Del Valle/Rice University

Ordering in? Plants are way ahead of you

January 29, 2020

Dissolved carbon in soil can quench plants' ability to communicate with soil microbes, allowing plants to fine-tune their relationships with symbionts. Experiments show how synthetic biology tools developed at Rice University can help understand environmental controls on agricultural productivity.

Carbon black powder turns into graphene in a burst of light and heat through a technique developed at Rice University. Flash graphene turns any carbon source into the valuable 2D material in 10 milliseconds. (Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)

Rice lab turns trash into valuable graphene in a flash

January 27, 2020

Scientists at Rice University are using high-energy pulses of electricity to turn any source of carbon into turbostratic graphene in an instant. The process promises environmental benefits by turning waste into valuable graphene that can then strengthen concrete and other composite materials.

Caroline Ajo-Franklin joined Rice University as a professor of biosciences with funding from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas. (Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)

CPRIT grant bolsters Rice biosciences

January 22, 2020

Rice University recruits synthetic biologist Caroline Ajo-Franklin with a $6 million grant from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas to bolster the university’s cutting-edge Systems, Synthetic and Physical Biology program.

Junichiro Kono and Qimiao Si

Study finds billions of quantum entangled electrons in 'strange metal'

January 16, 2020

Rice physicists and collaborators have observed quantum entanglement among "billions of billions" of flowing electrons in a quantum critical material.

Rice University researchers boosted the stability of their low-energy, copper-ruthenium syngas photocatalysts by shrinking the active sites to single atoms of ruthenium (blue). (Image by John Mark Martirez/UCLA)

Gasification goes green

January 10, 2020

Rice University engineers have created a light-powered nanoparticle that could shrink the carbon footprint of syngas producers.

Rice University Interim Provost Seiichi Matsuda, center, and Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur Director Abhay Karandikar, right, hold the memorandum of understanding signed today at Kanpur to collaborate on research in the development of energy solutions, materials and sustainable technologies. Behind Matsuda is Reginald DesRoches, dean of Rice’s George R. Brown School of Engineering, who will become provost in July. (Credit: Courtesy of the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur)

Rice, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur sign memorandum

January 9, 2020

Rice University and the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur (IITK) have signed a memorandum of understanding to collaborate on investing resources and research in the development of energy solutions, materials and sustainable technologies.

A structural view of the light-sensing part of PixJ from the side and above captured through X-ray crystallography demonstrates changes in the signaling protein when excited by light. The protein, part of the phytochromes responsible for letting plants sense the presence of light, was one of the first analyzed by researchers at Rice and elsewhere at the upgraded laser at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. (Credit: Jonathan Clinger/Rice University)

X-rays show how light transforms photosynthesis ‘switch’

January 7, 2020

Researchers at Rice and their colleagues get their first detailed look at how plant proteins reconfigure themselves when exposed to light.

The caduceus, often depicted as a symbol of medicine, and a cohesin protein.

Snake-like proteins can wrangle DNA

January 2, 2020

Theoretical simulations at Rice University suggest structural maintenance of chromosome proteins coil not only around each other but also around the strands of DNA they help manipulate. These strands are formed into loops that regulate transcription and other cellular processes.

Rice University physicists (from left) Tong Chen, Pengcheng Dai, David Tam, Andriy Nevidomskyy, Bin Gao and Emilia Morosan

Physicists find first possible 3D quantum spin liquid

July 15, 2019

Rice physicists show cerium zirconium pyrochlore qualifies as the first possible 3D quantum spin liquid.

Leslie Contreras Schwartz

Houston’s new poet laureate: ‘Rice absolutely helped me get to this place’

May 17, 2019

Teslaphoresis

Nanotubes assemble! Rice introduces ‘Teslaphoresis’

April 14, 2016

Scientists at Rice University have discovered that the strong force field emitted by a Tesla coil causes carbon nanotubes to self-assemble into long wires, a phenomenon they call “Teslaphoresis.”

Richard Smalley

Nanotech pioneer, Nobel laureate Richard Smalley dead at 62

October 28, 2005

Nobel laureate Richard Smalley, co-discoverer of the buckyball, died from cancer in Houston. He was 62.

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