News & Events

News

  • Graduate student Lily Thompson wins EAPSI award

    April 15, 2016

    Graduate student Lily Thompson has been accepted into the East Asia and Pacific Summer Institutes, sponsored jointly by the National Science Foundation and the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. With this EAPSI award Lily will spend the summer with researchers at Ehime University, where she will apply ab initio calculation methods to investigate the mineralogy of hydrous phases in Earth's deep interior.

  • DoGS students win NSF Graduate Fellowships!

    March 30, 2016

    Graduate students Sarah Tulga (paleontology) and Jennika Greer (cosmochemistry), as well as current and former undergraduates Rachel Atlas (atmospheric chemistry), Alexandra Boghosian (glaciology), and Hannah Kenagy (atmospheric chemistry) have won prestigious graduate fellowships from the National Science Foundation. These fellowships provide three years of funding and have a 12% acceptance rate. Congratulations!

  • Kite unscrambles cryovolcanic eruptions on Saturn’s moon Enceladus

    March 29, 2016

    Assistant Professor Edwin Kite has published a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on the volcanically-active tiger stripes of Enceladus. The paper uses a new model of the plumbing system of the eruptions to simultaneously explain the persistence of the eruptions through the tidal cycle, the phase lag, and the total power output of the tiger stripe terrain, while suggesting that eruptions are maintained over geological timescales.

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