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Computer scientists have a key role in shaping quantum systems
As new quantum systems are built, computer scientists will have to answer fundamental questions about how they will work.
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Participants in the Siegel Public Interest Technologies Summer Fellowship program stand with program organizer and Emerging Scholar Nia Brazzell (center with checked dress). (Photos by Frank Wojciechowski) Summer fellowship gives students hands-on experience with public interest technology
Students worked for agencies such as the Federal Trade Commission, attorney general offices in Texas and Colorado, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Among many projects, they helped federal regulators manage consumer privacy, supported plans to extend high-speed internet to underserved communities, and examined the legal implications of workers and workplace surveillance.
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Episode 2: That Magic Touch
“The idea was so thrilling for me, because I had this sound in my head, and I knew that if I could just get the right numbers, create the right code, I knew there was a way to realize that sound… So I didn’t mind trudging through the snow at midnight. I think sometimes when…
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Princeton Engineering researchers found a way to rapidly mix liquids in 3D porous environments where there is typically not enough space for turbulence to develop. Image courtesy of the researchers. Better mixing leads to faster reactions for key chemicals
Researchers found a way to mimic turbulent mixing in 3D porous environments by loading one of the liquids with springy polymers that stretch and recoil at microscopic scales, speeding chemical reaction rates by as much as a factor of 10.
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Eric Teitelbaum (center), former graduate student of Forrest Meggers, speaks to visitors inside the Cold Tube pavilion in Singapore. Part Fourteen: Hello, World
From making cities more sustainable and cooler, to combatting climate change and a global pandemic, to raising the next generation of programmers, Princeton Engineering carries on a hundred-year tradition of global impact.
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Chou Elected to National Academy of Inventors
Fellows are elected for "outstanding contributions to innovation in areas such as patents and licensing, innovative discovery and technology, significant impact on society, and support and enhancement of innovation."
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Princeton’s newest building a study in light
Princeton’s newest building, a deceptively simple glass cube nestled into the east side of campus, dissolves into the silhouette of nearby sycamore trees and the fiery clouds of a late summer sunset.
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Data drive quests to control nuclear fusion
Running a fusion reactor is like holding part of the sun in a bottle its heart is a raging storm of particles trapped in a magnetic field. To translate this storm’s power into a practical energy source, scientists will have to harness and control the reactor by adjusting the twists and flows of its superheated…
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Microsoft chief Craig Mundie visits Princeton on campus tour
Craig Mundie, the chief research and strategy officer of Microsoft, visited Princeton yesterday to discuss the future of computers with engineering students and faculty and to demonstrate new technologies the software giant is developing.
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Princeton researchers demonstrated an experimental platform that allows scientists to study the hydrogels’ hidden workings in soils, along with other compressed, confined environments. ‘See-through soil’ could help farmers deal with future drought
In research that may eventually help crops survive drought, scientists at Princeton University have uncovered a key reason that mixing material called hydrogels with soil has sometimes proven disappointing for farmers.