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PSBJ First Look at the LSB
Expected to open in early September, the 207,000-square-foot building will be ready to host students in the fall.
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Trumps Space Force aims to create 'American dominance in space' by 2020
Saadia Pekkanen, director of the Space Security Initiative at the UW's Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, weighs in on space force.
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For UW physicists, the 2-D form of tungsten ditelluride is full of surprises
For a team led by scientists at the UW, the 2-D form of one metallic compound — tungsten ditelluride, or WTe2 — is a bevy of quantum revelations.
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Amazon HQ2 bid is already paying off for some cities
Professor Margaret O'Mara weighs in on the impact of Amazon on cities that bid to be the location of its HQ2.
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Our Neighbor Andromeda May Have Cannibalized Another Galaxy
UW Astronomy assistant professor Sarah Tuttle is quoted.
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Barbs for Bezos but Bill Gates largely admired in Seattle
UW History Professor Margaret O'Mara is quoted in this op-ed comparing the reputations of Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates.
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KEXP and dream team of archivists plan digitization labs to help listeners save their music memories
KEXP and the University of Washington Ethnomusicology Archives, connected to the School of Music's Ethnomusicology Division, host Pop Up Music Memory Digitization Labs on July 28.
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Research team discovers drug compound that stops cancer cells from spreading
Chemists from the UW Department of Chemistry are part of a team finding a way to stop cancer cells from moving around the body.
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Atomically thin magnetic device could lead to new memory technologies
A University of Washington-led team is working on a magnetic breakthrough that may revolutionize both cloud computing technologies and consumer electronics.
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Making the case: four Jackson School students are finalists in nationwide policy competition
The team of four made it to the final round of the national New York University Policy Case Competition.
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Breaking bottlenecks to the electronic-photonic information technology revolution
UW chemistry professor emeritus Larry Dalton is part of the research team that has achieved an optical communications breakthrough that could revolutionize information technology.
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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.
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Why nuclear fusion is gaining steam – again
Scott L. Montgomery with the Jackson School of International Studies writes about the new future of fusion.
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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.
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Solar-powered innovation on the Life Sciences Building
The new Life Sciences Building features windows that allow the sun to naturally light the space.