Past News
Novel treatment for life-threatening lung condition wins NSF support
March 17, 2021
A Purdue University-affiliated startup developing a novel treatment for a life-threatening lung condition has won a $256,000 Small Business Technology Transfer Phase I award from the National Science Foundation.
Novel treatment for life-threatening lung condition wins NSF support
New technology aims to improve battery life
March 11, 2021
If you want power, you lose battery life. If you want battery life, you lose power. Now, new technology from Purdue University innovators aims to improve battery life.
Soft contact lenses eyed as new solutions to monitor ocular diseases
March 10, 2021
Soft contact lenses eyed as new solutions to monitor ocular diseases
Soft contact lenses eyed as new solutions to monitor ocular diseases
Purdue team predicts next-generation microbiome research promises agricultural advances
March 9, 2021
Purdue microbiome researchers believe a holistic approach to microbiome research will soon offer opportunities to make advances in agriculture.
Purdue team predicts next-generation microbiome research promises agricultural advances
Think the brain is always efficient? Think again.
March 5, 2021
A Purdue University neuroscientist’s findings suggest that the brain is not as efficient as we think.
A quantum internet is closer to reality, thanks to this switch
March 2, 2021
Purdue University researchers have demonstrated a new method for building quantum networks that can support communication between a larger number of quantum computers.
A quantum internet is closer to reality, thanks to this switch
Purdue researchers explore how sound drives Mongolian herder cultural practices
March 1, 2021
Bryan Pijanowski, professor of landscape and soundscape ecology, is leading a multi-disciplinary effort to study the relationships Mongolian herders have with their landscapes through the lens of sound.
Purdue researchers explore how sound drives Mongolian herder cultural practices
Ice frozen under Mars’ surface offers major resource to aid future settlements
March 1, 2021
Purdue scientist Ali Bramson, a planetary scientist in the College of Science, is using radar analysis to determine extent, location of deposits of subsurface ice on Mars.
Ice frozen under Mars’ surface offers major resource to aid future settlements
Scientists use Doppler to peer inside cells, leading to better, faster diagnoses and treatments of infections
February 24, 2021
A Purdue University team is using doppler radar to look inside living cells, introducing a method to detect pathogens and treat infections in ways that scientists never have before.
Scientists use Doppler to peer inside cells, leading to better, faster diagnoses and treatments of infections
Agile underwater glider could quietly survey the seas
February 23, 2021
Nina Mahmoudian and her students have developed an underwater glider that can operate silently and in confined spaces, ideal for conducting biology or climate studies without disturbing wildlife.