UC Merced Reports CAREER Award to Professor Marie-Odile Fortier will Support Enhanced Renewable Energy Assessments goldrushcam.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from goldrushcam.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
U.C. Davis Feb. 25 announced that 12 of their faculty members were honored with National Science Foundation early career, or CAREER, awards, including Indian American professors Ambarish Kulkarni and Aditya Thakur.
Given by the NSFâs Faculty Early Career Development Program, the grants can run up to five years and typically include both research and educational components.
Kulkarni, of the Department of Chemical Engineering in the College of Engineering, aims to help design better and cheaper catalysts for fuel cell applications.
Existing catalysts are made with expensive platinum-based alloys, which are difficult to scale for mass production. His project will focus on metal organic frameworks that act like nanoreactors, according to the U.C. Davis news release.
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IMAGE: Brain-skull interaction will be digitally modeled and analyzed using a high-density shape analysis, similar to this digital model of a chicken skull. The colors represent different types of landmark points.. view more
Credit: Akinobu Watanabe
Old Westbury, NY Akinobu Aki Watanabe, Ph.D., assistant professor of anatomy at New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine (NYITCOM), has secured a prestigious Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) award from the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF).
Watanabe, a vertebrate paleontologist, is the first New York Institute of Technology faculty member to receive a CAREER award, which is one of the NSF s most competitive grants. Principal investigators can receive this award once in their career and may only submit a proposal three times. Watanabe s first submission was selected and is expected to receive a five-year award of $710,855. His research project, Evo-Developmental Inte
NYITCOM researcher secures NSF CAREER award to study brain-skull interactions news-medical.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from news-medical.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Following an $843,000 award from the National Science Foundation s (NSF) Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) grant, an assistant professor at Texas State will research how and why minority women