Alumni Profile: Leah Barton ’97
Leah Barton ’97 has taken her Chemical Engineering degree into the business world. As one of only four chemical engineering majors in her class, Barton
Leah Barton ’97 has taken her Chemical Engineering degree into the business world. As one of only four chemical engineering majors in her class, Barton
Kim Woodrow, a postdoctoral fellow of the Department of Biomedical Engineering, has been awarded the L’Oréal USA 2007 Fellowship for Women in Science. Developed to
In culinary spheres, a microwave oven is frowned upon. Nevertheless, it has become an integral part of the kitchen. Owing to the fact that its
Time is a great equalizer: Every one of us, from postal worker to president, is allotted the same twenty-four hours each day to do with
When Aaron Ring ’08 left his home in Washington for Yale, he knew that he wanted to do at least two things: research and music.
The science of tissue engineering has taken another step forward thanks to Professor Paul Van Tassel’s latest investigations in the Yale Department of Engineering. At
The term “Industrial Ecology” sounds like an oxymoron, but “we relish that,” says Marian R. Chertow, Assistant Professor of Industrial Environmental Management and the Director
Will our near future be characterized by supercomputers and artificial atoms? Dr. Robert Schoelkopf, Professor of Applied Physics and Physics, and Dr. Steven Girvin, Deputy
New epidemiology studies have shown that diets rich in fruits and vegetables correlate with a reduced risk for certain kinds of cancer. Victoria Kirsh, a
Plate tectonics on Earth has long been regarded as a somewhat puzzling phenomenon. Why is Earth’s lithosphere – the outer crust and the cold part