Framing the Research Landscape

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Research Next started with one question: If we were to develop the university research enterprise from scratch, what would it look like? This question arises from the growing complexity and interconnectedness of modern research universities.

Interactive visualizations

Deep Learning Visualization Going Viral 

Interactive visualizations are quickly becoming a favorite tool to help teach and learn deep learning subjects. One visualization in particular is rising to the top of GitHub, Twitter, and LinkedIn as a standout resource to understand convolutional neural networks (CNNs).

Battery Testing

Spontaneous Formation of Nanoscale Hollow Structures Could Boost Battery Storage

An unexpected property of nanometer-scale antimony crystals — the spontaneous formation of hollow structures — could help give the next generation of lithium ion batteries higher energy density without reducing battery lifetime. The reversibly hollowing structures could allow lithium ion batteries to hold more energy and therefore provide more power between charges.

cool image - super nova in a lab

This Supernova in a Lab Mimics the Cosmic Blast's Splendid Aftermath

Nestled in the constellation Taurus, a spectacle of swirling cosmic gases measuring half a dozen light-years across glows in shades of emerald and auburn. The Crab Nebula was born of a supernova, the explosion of a giant star, and now, a lab machine the size of a double door replicates how the immense blast paints these astronomical swirls into existence.

Georgia Tech new NAE members

Four Georgia Tech Faculty Elected NAE Fellows

Four Georgia Institute of Technology faculty members have been elected as new members of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE). Marilyn Brown, Thomas Kurfess, Susan Margulies, and Alexander Shapiro join 83 other new NAE members for 2020 when they are formally inducted during a ceremony at the academy’s annual meeting on Oct. 4 in Washington, D.C.

Researchers are trying to understand the math behind how stitches alter the elasticity

Science News: How One Physicist Is Unraveling the Mathematics of Knitting 

Physicist Elisabetta Matsumoto is an avid knitter and has been since taking up the hobby as a child. During graduate school at the University of Pennsylvania in 2009, Matsumoto came across an unusually knotty stitch while knitting a pattern for a Japanese red dragon. “I have books with thousands of different stitch patterns, but the one in the red dragon wall hanging was one I had never seen,” she says. That got her thinking about the geometry of stitches and, eventually, led her to study the mathematics of knitting.

A New Playground for Quantum Exploration: Magnetic Solitons

A New Playground for Quantum Exploration: Magnetic Solitons Created in Bose-Einstein Condensate

Most waves lose their shape as they travel, but solitons defy that behavior. These self-reinforcing waves are ubiquitous in natural and artificial environments such as rivers, optical fibers, and even Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs; see Synopsis: Solitons of All Speeds). Now, two teams of researchers have independently created magnetic solitons in a BEC made from atoms with different spins. The experiments establish a new playground for further exploration of quantum solitons.