Dewdrops on a spiderweb reveal the physics behind cell structures
As any cook knows, some liquids mix well with each other, but others do not.
Princeton Certificate Expo for Undergraduates
The Program in Applied and Computational Mathematics will be participating in this year's virtual Princeton Certificate Expo, to be held on Tuesday, 1/26 from 1-2:30pm and Friday, 2/5 from 3-4:30pm. We encourage both current and prospective certificate students to "stop by" for discussion about the program and to answer questions.
Princeton partners on $30 million grant to advance internet infrastructure
Princeton University researchers are partners on a major initiative to help shape the next generation of computer networks.
Four Princeton students awarded Schwarzman Scholarships for study in Beijing
Princeton seniors Ilene E, Arjun Sai Krishnan, Austin Mejia and Karthik Ramesh have been named Schwarzman Scholars.
2020 ACM Gordon Bell Prize Awarded to Team for Machine Learning Method that Achieves Record Molecular Dynamics Simulation
ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, named a nine-member team, drawn from Chinese and American institutions, recipients of the 2020 ACM Gordon Bell Prize for their project, “Pushing the limit of molecular dynamics with ab initio accuracy to 100 million atoms with machine learning.”
Forward Fest public conversation series with faculty experts and alumni continues as part of A Year of Forward Thinking
Princeton’s Forward Fest — a virtual public conversation series and a monthly highlight of the University’s yearlong A Year of Forward Thinking community engagement campaign — continues at 8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 20, with a deep-dive into the promise and peril of data science and artificial intelligence.
Software for determining the 3D structure of proteins
A new software package aims to aid drug design and biomedical research by making it easy to construct 3D images of proteins and other molecules using one of the world’s most powerful microscopes.
How exactly do we spread droplets as we talk? Engineers found out.
For the first time, researchers have directly visualized how speaking produces and expels droplets of saliva into the air.
Professor Romain Teyssier to Join Princeton Faculty
Professor Romain Teyssier of the Institute for Computational Science at the University of Zurich has accepted a faculty position jointly between the Department of Astrophysical Sciences and the Program in Applied and Computational Mathematics (PACM), and will join us
Long-term COVID-19 containment will be shaped by strength and duration of natural, vaccine-induced immunity
New research suggests that the impact of natural and vaccine-induced immunity will be key factors in shaping the future trajectory of the global coronavirus pandemic, known as COVID-19.