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The World According to Nanometers
Scientists at the Center for Nanotechnology are asking big questions using technology that allows them to study at the smallest scale.
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A New Approach to Fighting Malaria
A research team that includes Michael Gelb, professor of chemistry, received the Project of the Year Award from the Medicines for Malaria Venture for research on parasites that cause malaria and sleeping sickness.
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The End of a Lifelong Journey
Astronaut Michael Anderson, who perished in the space shuttle Columbia, earned his B.S. from the UW College of Arts and Sciences in physics and astronomy.
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Homage to an Adventurer
After Frith Maier retraced adventurer George Kennan's 1870 route through the Caucasus Mountains, the journey became the basis of her UW master's thesis and a new book.
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Merging Interests
There have been big changes in the College of Arts and Sciences in the past few years as long-standing departments have joined together to create new, more effective units.
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Encouraging Questions, Not Answers
At the Summer Institute in Life Science, offered by UW Biology Program, middle school teachers do a lot of hands-on learning--and gain ideas for their own classrooms.
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Aperture Fever Leads to Astronomy Fellowship
A childhood interest in astronomy, renewed in adulthood, led David Brooks to support postdoctoral fellowships in the Department of Astronomy.
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Leading Biotechnology into the 21st Century
Art Levinson (1972), head of biotech firm Genentech, got his start working in a faculty lab as a UW student.
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A Living Collection of Medicinal Plants
The UW's Medicinal Herb Garden, home to hundreds of medicinal plants, has a long and colorful history.
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A Space Odyssey for A&S Alumni
Five A&S alumni who have been astronauts talk about their experiences.
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Scientists find elusive gas from post-starburst galaxies hiding in plain sight
Scientists once thought that post-starburst galaxies scattered all of their gas and dust — the fuel required for creating new stars — in violent bursts of energy, and with extraordinary speed. Now, a team led by University of Washington postdoctoral researcher Adam Smercina reports that these galaxies don’t scatter all of their star-forming fuel after all. Instead, data from the Chile-based Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, or ALMA, reveals a more complex process at work.
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In an astounding space scene, two galaxies pummeled through each other
Julianne Dalcanton, professor emeritus of astronomy, explains the dramatic deep space collision of two galaxies.