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katie hobbs and sharon megdal sitting on chairs on a stage and talking

Dialogue, collaboration matter most to Arizona's water future

March 13, 2024

An annual conference, presented by the university's Water Resources Research Center, brought together a wide-ranging constituency to discuss solutions to the state's water-related problems.

Read more at UArizona News
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aerial view of Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone National Park, a geyser pool that is deep blue and green in the center and orange and red on the edges, surrounded by arid landscape

Loathed by scientists, loved by nature: sulfur and the origin of life

March 13, 2024

A University of Arizona-led study shines a spotlight on sulfur, a chemical element that, while all familiar, has proved surprisingly resistant to scientific efforts in probing its role in the origin of life.

Read more at UArizona News
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a person sleeping in a bed with white sheets under a soft blue light

Poor sleep linked to migraine attacks in new UArizona Health Sciences study

March 13, 2024

Researchers at the Comprehensive Center for Pain & Addiction found that sleep disturbances increased vulnerability to migraine attacks, but the opposite isn't true.

Read more at UArizona News
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Tucked inside a clear container protected by a metal casing, the pebble collected from asteroid Bennu by the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is one of only three places in the world to display an extraterrestrial rock sample collected in space (other than the moon)

A pebble scooped from an asteroid is now on display at UArizona museum

March 6, 2024

The Alfie Norville Gem & Mineral Museum is now one of only three places in the world where the public can see a piece of the asteroid Bennu, collected during NASA's University of Arizona-led OSIRIS-REx mission.

Read more at UArizona News
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This artist's illustration shows the surroundings of a young star, with gas and dust forming a swirling circumstellar disk.

James Webb Space Telescope captures the end of planet formation

March 5, 2024

How much time do planets have to form from a swirling disk of gas and dust around a star? A new University of Arizona-led study gives scientists a better idea of how our own solar system came to be.

Read more at UArizona News
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A graphic which shows the amount of funsing for each college in University of Arizona Health Sciences.

NIH funding increases lead to impressive performance in Blue Ridge rankings

Feb. 29, 2024

Five colleges increased their National Institutes of Health research funding in 2022-2023, leading to higher rankings for some by the Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research.

Read more at UArizona News
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Tethered by a long cable, the high altitude balloon carrying the GUSTO telescope is being launched from McMurdo Research Station in Antarctica.

Steward Observatory balloon mission breaks NASA record 22 miles above Antarctica

Feb. 24, 2024

Seeking clues about the life cycle of stars, the GUSTO balloon mission, led by university astronomer Chris Walker, breaks the record as NASA's longest-flying heavy-lift balloon mission.

Read more at UArizona News
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Muhammed Yusufoglu gesturing toward a poster while another person looks on

National leaders gather at UArizona to map the future of semiconductors

Feb. 23, 2024

Advances in semiconductor technology are indispensable to today's standard of living. Industry leaders met to strategize ways to shore up the domestic semiconductor industry.

Read more at UArizona News
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man in glasses taking a big leap in a grassy field

The science of leap day – how it works and why we do it

Feb. 21, 2024

Ahead of Feb. 29, UArizona Regents Professor of planetary sciences Renu Malhotra explains why we need leap year, why we skip it once a century and why we sometimes need to add leap seconds.
 

Read more at UArizona News
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a person holding a lidar scanner with a camera lens and light scanning an mortar and pestle sitting on a table

How a team of students uses technology to preserve and share Black history

Feb. 21, 2024

The University of Arizona Center for Digital Humanities partners with clients such as the Tucson Center for Black Life to both preserve historical artifacts and make them widely available as digital exhibits.

Read more at UArizona News

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