Led by USC Dornsife’s Don Arnold and Richard Roberts, a new study published in Neuron explains how scientists for the first…
Housed in USC Dornsife, the Development Portfolio Management Group opens in Arlington, Va. The group works on improving…
Claire Baugher, double major in psychology and political science, helped to transform a storage facility into a small theatre…
USC Dornsife students were among those who spoke during a recent TEDx, a local, independently organized offshoot of the…
After neuroscience and human biology major Erin Walker volunteered assisting in dentistry work in Honduras, she founded the…
A multinational research team has discovered filamentous bacteria that function as living power cables in order to transmit electrons thousands of cell lengths away. The Desulfobulbus bacterial cells, which are only a few… more>
categories: research, faculty research
tags: biological physics, moh el-naggar, natural sciences, physics, publication
USC Dornsife scientist Moh El-Naggar has been selected as one of Popular Science’s 2012 Brilliant 10, the magazine’s annual honor roll of the 10 most promising young scientists. El-Naggar is featured in the… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity
tags: biophysics, diversity, moh el-naggar, natural sciences, physics, popular science
Two USC Dornsife doctoral students have been awarded USC’s Center for Applied Mathematical Sciences (CAMS) Graduate Student Prize for Excellence in Research for their contributions to the fields of mathematics and… more>
categories: graduate, graduate research
tags: award, cams, center for applied mathematical sciences, edward blum, mathematics, natural sciences, physics, susan friedlander
Diamonds are forever — or, at least, the effects of this diamond on quantum computing may be. A team that includes scientists from USC has built a quantum computer in a diamond, the first of its kind to include… more>
categories: research, faculty research
tags: chemistry, daniel lidar, diamond, natural sciences, nature, physics, physics and astronomy, publication, quantum computing
To learn why time moves only forward one must first understand a fundamental law of physics: the increase of entropy. The law describes the tendency for systems to go from a state of higher organization to disorder. Consider… more>
categories: undergraduate
tags: anna krylov, award, chemistry, clifford johnson, competition, event, film, movie, natural sciences, physics, physics and astronomy, science, time
When American physicist Richard Feynman in 1982 proposed creating a quantum computer that could solve complex problems, the idea was merely a theory scientists believed was far off in the future. A few decades later, USC… more>
categories: research, faculty research
tags: aolo zanardi, chemistry, computer, daniel lidar, grant, natural sciences, physics, physics and astronomy, quantum computing
Skylab astronaut and USC alumnus Jerry Carr presented USC Dornsife student Simca Bouma with a $10,000 scholarship from the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation (ASF) during a public presentation and ceremony. The event was held… more>
categories: undergraduate, undergraduate research
tags: astronaut, astronaut scholarship foundation, award, event, mathematics, natural sciences, physics, physics and astronomy, scholarship, space
John H. Marburger III, former dean of USC Dornsife and science adviser to President George W. Bush, has died. He was 70. Marburger died at his home in Port Jefferson, N.Y., on July 28, after a four-year bout with… more>
tags: dean, electrical engineering, john marburger, natural sciences, obituary, physics
Senior Jake Bloch grew up seeing religion and science mixed together — right on his father’s bookshelf. Books by Alfred North Whitehead sat side by side with those by Albert Einstein, along with Houston Smith… more>
categories: undergraduate, undergraduate research
tags: documentary, humanities, mathematics, music, natural sciences, nick warner, physics, physics and astronomy, religion, varun soni
Daniel J. Strouse, one of 14 students from U.S. universities chosen to receive the prestigious Churchill Scholarship, is the first at USC. Churchill Scholars must demonstrate extraordinary talent, outstanding academic… more>
categories: undergraduate
tags: award, churchill scholarship, mathematics, natural sciences, neuroscience, physics, scholarship


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