What's Current in

Science + Technology

Image
scientist holds a chip-scale ring resonator and a commercially available Fabry-Perot laser diode
Photo Credit
Sonia Fernandez
Andrei Isichenko holds the ultra-high-quality ring resonator (left), which can help turn the "coarse" light from a commercially available Fabry-Perot laser diode (right) into a low linewidth laser

Bringing the power of tabletop precision lasers for quantum science to the chip scale

Read Article

Image
researchers working with Senegalese partners
Photo Credit
Courtesy Image
UCSB geographer David López-Carr, center left, and Stanford University health and environmental scientist Andrea Lund, center right, working with Senegalese partners
Image
David Valentine
Photo Credit
Matt Perko
David Valentine
Image
SEM image of shocked quartz
Photo Credit
Courtesy Image
Shocked quartz grains, with fissures filled with meltglass
Image
engineering professor outside portrait
Photo Credit
Courtesy Image
Haewon Jeong
Image
A collage of marine creatures.
Photo Credit
Harrison Tasoff
Transferable conservation credits could incentivize comprehensive protection the ocean’s diverse habitats and wildlife.
Image
Yellowstone National Park sign with mountains in the background.
Photo Credit
Anna Pietrzykowska via iStock
National parks are far from the only way to protect areas of land. Systems like, indigenous governance, community management and Eco-certified production can also foster conservation.
Image
winners of business plan competition with large first-place check
Photo Credit
Courtesy Image
NVC Finals judge Jason Rollman (left, in blue shirt) congratulates EyeClimate, the 2024 New Venture Competition Finals champions (from second to left) Bowen Zhang, PhD student; Max Gordon, undergraduate student; and Satish Kumar, PhD student
Image
Theo world map fading into blue water.
Photo Credit
Philip Hoeppli via iStock