College of Arts and Sciences
Physics professor receives a DOE topical collaboration grant to study heavy-quark physics
Dr. Michael Strickland's group will participate in a new Topical Theory Collaboration funded by DOE鈥檚 Office of Nuclear Physics to explore the behavior of heavy flavor particles. The collaboration will receive $2.5 Million from the DOE Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics, over five years. That funding will provide partial support for six graduate students and three postdoctoral fellows at 10 institutions, as well as a senior staff position at one of the national laboratories. It will also establish a bridge junior faculty position at 丁香五月婷婷中文.
Excellence in Undergraduate and Graduate Research Mentorship Awards
From 丁香五月婷婷中文's Division of Research & Economic Development丁香五月婷婷中文 is pleased to announce the two winners of both the Excellence in Undergraduate Research Mentorship Award and Excellence in Graduate Research Mentorship Award. As part of the nominati鈥Queer Pandemic Collaborative Project Part of Award-Winning UK Museum
Queer Britain opened as the UK鈥檚 first LGBTQ museum in London in May and its inaugural exhibition 鈥淲e Are Queer Britain鈥 won a Museums Change Lives Award (Best Small Museum Project) in November from the UK-based Museums Association. This first installation featured The Queer Pandemic Project, an int鈥Department of Geography Offering Study Abroad Options Year-Round
Starting in Spring 2023, the Department of Geography will have a continuous study abroad program for the first time. Both Environmental Studies majors and Geography majors can take classes for their major while spending either a semester in Florence, participating in the Florence Summer Institute, o鈥What's the Big Idea? Seeking a Deeper Understanding of the Mission of the Urban League
Hop on board as 丁香五月婷婷中文 President Todd Diacon engages with Elizabeth Smith-Pryor, associate professor of history with 丁香五月婷婷中文鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences, as she conducts research on the impact of the Urban League.
Biological Sciences Researchers Study Tire and Road Wear Pollutants in Kent Campus Stormwater Wetlands
When driving in the rain, it is unlikely that you have thought much about how the environment is affected, let alone how nearby aquatic sources are impacted.
First-Generation College Student Alum Exemplifies Transformative Power of Public Humanities
We recently celebrated all of our first-generation students and alumni during 鈥淚 Am First鈥 week, but we want to congratulate one particular alum who is a shining example of what a first-gen student can accomplish at 丁香五月婷婷中文 and beyond, with just the right amount of creativity and drive鈥Honors Student Receives Distinguished May 4th Honors Memorial Scholarship
Honors College student Daniel Zalamea is a first-year 丁香五月婷婷中文 student studying chemistry. He is the recipient of the May 4th Honors Memorial Scholarship, awarded to one member of each entering honors freshman class. Having only been a 丁香五月婷婷中文 student for a matter of months, D鈥Butch Named Heritage Ohio Volunteer of the Year
What makes a town like Kent, Ohio special? The people, right? What about the special events? Throughout the year, the City of Kent and 丁香五月婷婷中文 play host to a wide variety of amazing events. It takes dedicated volunteers to organize and put in the hard work to pull off t鈥Research Update: Studying neutron stars with gravitational waves
Neutron stars are some of the densest objects in the universe, and as such, the conditions at the cores of these extreme objects are impossible to reproduce on Earth. However, we can use data from the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO) and the Virgo gravitational wave detector to gain insights into the physics of neutron stars.