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Muggle hacks: How to use tech to become an actual wizard like Harry Potter
Department of Mathematics professor, Gunther Uhlmann, proposed a series of equations which could be used to build an invisibility cloak.
04/17/2018 | Mashable -
Starbucks will close stores for racial-bias session
Reaffirming the plan of broader change, Ralina Joseph with the UW Department of Communications leads a training similar to the one Starbucks will use.
04/17/2018 | The Seattle Times -
How to Build a Midlife Worth Living
UW department of psychology professor Marsha Linehan's Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is being used to help women struggling in midlife.
04/17/2018 | Psychology Today -
Stressed-out teens: Schools take new approaches to avert tragedy
UW department of psychology associate professor Kate McLaughlin weighs in on stress and children // Video
04/16/2018 | Today -
Circumbinary castaways: Short-period binary systems can eject orbiting worlds
New research from the UW Department of Astronomy helps to explain why astronomers have detected few circumbinary planets.
04/12/2018 | UW News -
Seattle’s gender wage gap is worse than we thought
Barbara Reskin, Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the UW weighs in on the impact of overtime in the City of Seattle's gender wage gap
04/10/2018 | Crosscut -
In the US, you don't have to kill to be a murderer
Scott Lemieux, of the UW Department of Political Science weighs in on felony-murder laws.
04/09/2018 | BBC News -
If Tiny Dark Matter Particle Exists, This Experiment Is Now Ready to Find It
The research team at the UW have announced that the Axion Dark Matter eXperiment (ADMX) is officially sensitive enough to find the theoretically predicted axion.
04/09/2018 | Gizmodo -
Why nuclear fusion is gaining steam – again
Scott L. Montgomery with the Jackson School of International Studies writes about the new future of fusion.
04/09/2018 | The Conversation -
After 30 years of R&D, breakthrough announced in dark matter detection technology, definitive search to begin for axion particles
The Axion Dark Matter Experiment (ADMX) at the University of Washington is the world's first experiment to be sensitive enough to "hear" the signs of dark matter axions.
04/09/2018 | UW News