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Artificial enzymes made of treated charcoal, seen in this atomic force microscope image, could have the power to curtail damaging levels of superoxides, toxic radical oxygen ions that appear at high concentrations after an injury. (Credit: Tour Group/Rice University)

Charcoal a weapon to fight superoxide-induced disease, injury

July 6, 2020

Artificial enzymes made of treated charcoal could have the power to curtail damaging levels of superoxides that appear after an injury.

A sample of blood vessel templates that Rice University bioengineers 3D-printed using a special blend of powdered sugars

Laser-welded sugar: Sweet way to 3D-print blood vessels

June 29, 2020

Bioengineers keep cells alive in lab-grown tissues by creating networks of branching blood vessels from templates of 3D-printed sugar.

A model by Rice University scientists shows how two positively charged spheres attached to springs are attracted to the electric field of light. Due to the motion of the spheres, the spring system scatters light at different energies when irradiated with clockwise and anticlockwise trochoidal waves. (Credit: Link Research Group/Rice University)

Cartwheeling light reveals new optical phenomenon

June 29, 2020

Researchers at Rice University have discovered details about a novel type of polarized light-matter interaction with light that literally turns end over end as it propagates from a source.

Vicky Yao

Study finds new link between Alzheimer’s suspects

June 29, 2020

Researchers have described for the first time specific genes and pathways in the brain associated with Alzheimer’s disease.

Rice University physicists discover that plasmonic metals can be prompted to produce “hot carriers” that in turn emit unexpectedly bright light in nanoscale gaps between electrodes. The phenomenon could be useful for photocatalysis, quantum optics and optoelectronics. (Credit: Illustration by Longji Cui and Yunxuan Zhu/Rice University)

Rice lab’s bright idea is pure gold

June 29, 2020

Physicists discover plasmonic metals can produce “hot carriers” that emit unexpectedly bright light in nanoscale gaps between electrodes.

One of the three new Little Free Libraries is outside Valhalla

Little Free Libraries on campus encourage ‘fun’ reading, lifetime learning habits

June 25, 2020

Just weeks after their installation, the boxes are bursting with popular titles.

Alexander Byrd is the associate dean of humanities and associate professor of history, widely admired for his mentoring skills and captivating classroom presence.

Byrd named a Piper Professor

June 25, 2020

The history professor — and Rice alum — is among the 10 best teachers in Texas.

Todd Treangen

Rice shares grant for AI-driven COVID-19 research

June 25, 2020

Todd Treangen received a C3.ai Digital Transformation Institute Award for computational biology research to apply AI models to COVID-19 mitigation.

An estimated 60,000 Houstonians, including Rice community members, marched in the “Justice 4 George Floyd” rally June 1. (Photo by Jeff Fitlow)

New racial justice fund from Center for Engaged Research and Collaborative Learning seeks creative solutions

June 24, 2020

The Fund for Racial Justice Teaching and Programming will offer grants to students and faculty to counter anti-Black racism.

Juneteenth

Inaugural Juneteenth lecture series convenes wide web audience

June 22, 2020

The entire lecture series is now available for viewing on Rice's YouTube channel.

Anthony Pinn

Center for African and African American Studies offers new minor, course and grad certificate

June 19, 2020

The new minor includes 72 different classes across 10 departments and programs.

The XENON1T experiment in Italy, now shut down for upgrades, found excess signals that may be evidence of axions. Courtesy of the XENON Experiment

Dark matter search turns up hint of mysterious particle

June 17, 2020

XENON1T scientists revealed they had detected excess — perhaps cosmic — particles that may be evidence of long-sought axions.

Lydia Kavraki

NSF RAPID grant supports COVID-19 'computational pipeline'

June 16, 2020

Lydia Kavraki wins a NSF Rapid Response Research grant to help identify SARS-CoV-2 viral proteins for vaccine development.

Ana María Martínez. Photo by Svetlana Pasedko.

Ana María Martínez to join Rice Shepherd School as professor of voice

June 15, 2020

Grammy Award-winning soprano Ana María Martínez will join Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music beginning July 1, 2021, as a professor in the Department of Voice.

Egyptian artist Ganzeer's installation “It Takes a Village” will be on view at Rice's Moody Center for the Arts through July 25. (Photo by Katharine Shilcutt)

Moody Center convenes creative summer series of virtual programming and performances by local artists

June 15, 2020

From large-scale installations to an intimate concert series, new works respond to a critical time in history.

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