Physics & Astronomy
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BYU Scientist Finds a Towering Mountain on an Earth-like Moon
NASA featured the work of Jani Radebaugh this week, who discovered a 10,948 foot peak on Saturn’s largest moon.
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BYU’s First Physics Grad Wins Posthumous Grammy Award
Throughout his life, Dr. Harvey Fletcher boosted BYU’s reputation through an array of impressive accomplishments. Fletcher, BYU’s first ever physics graduate, will bring recognition to his alma mater once more this spring by winning a Grammy Award.
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BYU Professor Honored by Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts & Letters
Jean-François Van Huele of the Department of Physics and Astronomy is the recipient of the 2015 Academy Fellow Award from the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts & Letters (UASAL).
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Physicists Can Be Writers, Too
These days, almost nothing lasts ten years before becoming obsolete, but the advice of two BYU physics professors has stood the test of time.
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Make Sense of Music at Sounds to Astound
How does running a bow across some strings translate to music in the ears? Why does a violin sound more high pitched than a cello?
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Award-Winning Professor Puts Students First
It’s all about the students for Kent Gee, BYU professor and most recent winner of the Lawrence K. Egbert Teaching and Learning Fellowship.
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Physics Alumnus Improves Radar Systems
“Physics” and “easier to understand” aren’t phrases that ordinarily appear together, but that’s what BYU alumnus Derek Hullinger is trying to accomplish.
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Lighting up the Science Center
14-year-old Anna Montoya leaned over her circuit board, soldering iron in hand as she carefully fused a maze of wires to the green board.
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For the Love of Teaching…and Physics
After being away for four years, Brian Anderson will return to BYU as a faculty member in the Department of Physics and Astronomy.
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Burning Calories to Better Science
Some people like to count calories, but BYU professor Mark Transtrum took it to a whole new level.
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The Sound of Music, According to Physicists
Joshua Bodon is sick of hearing “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.” More specifically, he’s sick of hearing one 25-second clip of the song repeated more than 550 times.
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Physicist Helps Students Shine
While most kids her age didn’t know what they wanted for dinner, eight-year-old Jeannette Lawler already knew she wanted to be a physicist.
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Professor’s Curiosity Drives Research
Steven Turley, professor in the BYU Department of Physics and Astronomy, has succeeded in turning his curiosity of the world into a career.
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By Small and Simple Magnets Are Great Things Brought to Pass
Studying magnetic behaviors on a microscopic scale can make a gigantic impact on modern science.
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Craters Come to Astrofest
The Eyring Science Center exploded with life as people of all ages made star charts, rock climbed, slid down blow-up slides, built rockets and paper airplanes, and viewed countless exciting demonstrations at Astrofest on Saturday, May 16.
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Student’s Nanocrystals Make Him a Wanted Man
From an underground lab on campus, an undergraduate student discovered how to harvest more energy from sunlight.
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