Save the dates for fall named lectures

Neutrino quantum kinetics in the Early Universe

Meet our new faculty: Humanities

Meet our new faculty: Social sciences

The Accelerating Expanding Universe: Dark Matter, Dark Energy, and Einstein's Cosmological Constant

The Accelerating Expanding Universe: Dark Matter, Dark Energy, and Einstein's Cosmological Constant

Physics Public Lecture: Prof. Bharat Ratra, Kansas State University

Dark energy is the leading candidate for the mechanism that is responsible for causing the cosmological expansion to accelerate.  Prof. Bharat Ratra will describe the astronomical data which persuade cosmologists that (as yet undetected) dark energy and dark matter are by far the main components of the energy budget of the universe at the present time. He will review how these observations have led to the development of a quantitative "standard" model of cosmology that describes the evolution of the universe from an early epoch of inflation to the complex hierarchy of structure seen today. He will also discuss the basic physics, and the history of ideas, on which this model is based.

National narcissism rears its head in study of WWII

Tolman Lab bolstered by $20 million grant renewal awarded to NSF Center for Sustainable Polymers

Favorite moments from Commencement 2019

Plants, humans, and climate change: A conversation with Dean Barbara Schaal

Understanding your biases

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