Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Connecticut has teamed up with faculty and staff in Yale School of Medicine’s Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences to create a high school internship program that fosters interest in science...
Rajendra K. Pachauri, chair of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, will discuss “The Third Assessment Report of the IPCC and Beyond,” on Wednesday, Sept. 10, at 10 a.m. in Bowers Auditorium of Sage Hall at the Yale School of Forestry &...
Using a novel dating technique, Yale geologists have discovered that desert sands found in Utah actually originated in the Appalachian Mountains in eastern North America. “This surprising finding suggests that an ancient westward-flowing river system...
A Yale astronomer and collaborators using X-ray, radio, and optical telescopes have announced a major clarification in the origin of mysterious objects known as X-ray flashes. The researchers found that X-ray flashes originate from blue star forming...
A Yale astronomer and collaborators using X-ray, radio, and optical telescopes have announced a major clarification in the origin of mysterious objects known as X-ray flashes. The researchers found that X-ray flashes originate from blue star forming...
Two of Yale Engineering’s newest female faculty, Erin Lavik and Ainissa Ramirez, have been named to the 2003 list of the world’s 100 Top Young Innovators by Technology Review, MIT’s Magazine of Innovation. The Technology Review 100 (TR100), chosen by...
Yale geophysicists may have unraveled one of the great, unsolved mysteries about the Earth’s interior – why the mantle appears both well mixed and unmixed at the same time. The Earth’s mantle is the 1,800-mile thick layer of rock between the crust and...
Experts in energy and the environment and public health and the environment have joined the faculty of the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies. Arnulf Grubler, professor in the field of energy and technology and a native of Austria,...
The John Lee, the fastest and lightest solar car ever built by Yale’s Team Lux, which runs at 65 mph under full sunlight using less power than a hairdryer, will race in its first international competition in May 2004 at the Phaethon Solar Car Race in...
Universities are in a unique position to draft licensing and patent strategies for development of life-saving medicines and technologies that benefit low-and middle-income countries, according to an editorial by faculty and students working at the Yale...