For more than four decades, the Nelson Institute’s Energy Analysis and Policy (EAP) program has been a leader in energy education, offering students in almost any graduate program on campus the opportunity to link big-picture energy issues w
Cryo-EM, an advanced microscopy technique that utilizes extremely cold temperatures and electron beams to illuminate the structures of some of the tiniest building blocks of life, has come to UW after years of investment — and it could help CALS scientists reach new frontiers in the biosciences
Media coverage of WEI this month focused on national climate change action, the challenges and opportunities in biobased products, and a new climate change campaign led by climate scientist moms.
A University of Wisconsin–Madison team will take part in the country’s most prominent undergraduate-level wind energy competition for the seventh consecutive year. The UW–Madison team, dubbed WiscWind, is one of 11 teams invited to participate in the U.S. Department of Energy’s 2022 Collegiate Wind Competition.
This week we check-in with Ashley Becker, a graduate research assistant in Randy Jackson's lab, to talk about how livestock management impacts plants and soil carbon and what brought her to the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
The importance of a good role model cannot be understated. One of the most effective ways to inspire more girls to go into science is to show them people who look like them in positions of leadership in the classroom, the lab, and in the office.
Tracey Holloway was in her first semester at Brown University, intent on majoring in political science, when she unexpectedly fell in love with math and science.