Scientists at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, a NYSERNet member, led by Ana Maria Cuervo, M.D., Ph.D., minimized artery-narrowing plaque in mice that would otherwise develop lesions. This study is the first to show that […]
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Can silicon technology replace superconductors?
Physicists at Princeton University, a NYSERNet member partnered with U.S. National Science Foundation were exploring using silicon-based technology in quantum computing, specifically as quantum bits called qubits. The studies guarantee to accelerate using the silicon […]
Read moreStormWind Training Partnership
NYSERNet and StormWind Studios have partnered to provide the NYSERNet community a substantial discount on their training offerings. We know your time is essential and attending a weeklong training session is not always possible. That’s […]
Read moreThe breakthrough could result in better particle accelerators and novel materials imaging
The researchers at U.S. National Science Foundation and Cornell University, a NYSERNet member created a single-crystal alkali antimonide photocathode with performance up to ten instances better than traditional photocathodes. One application of the new photocathode technology is development […]
Read moreAstronomers find hot, turbulent plasma at the center of galaxy clusters
A team of U.S. National Science Foundation grantee astronomers and astrophysicists based at the University of Rochester, a NYSERNet member tested the internal workings of heat conduction in galaxy clusters — heaps of galaxies held […]
Read moreAncient DNA reveals surprises about how early Africans lived, traveled and interacted
A new analysis of human remains buried at African archaeological sites has turned up the continent’s oldest DNA. Elizabeth Sawchuk, a Banting postdoctoral fellow at the University of Alberta and a research assistant professor at […]
Read moreThe effect of ‘eddy killing’ in oceans is no longer a matter of approximation. Scientists document a loss equivalent to exploding a Hiroshima nuclear bomb
Scientists at Columbia University have found new evidence from the bottom of a lake in the remote North Atlantic Faroe Islands indicates an unknown band of humans settled there around A.D. 500. They have taken […]
Read moreHumans reached remote North Atlantic islands centuries earlier than thought
Scientists at Columbia University have found new evidence from the bottom of a lake in the remote North Atlantic Faroe Islands indicates an unknown band of humans settled there around A.D. 500. They have taken […]
Read moreNYSERNet Announces Jeanne Casares as New President and CEO
Syracuse, NY (April 21, 2022) — NYSERNet (New York State Education and Research Network) is pleased to announce that Jeanne Casares has been named the organization’s new president and CEO, effective June 2, 2022. Casares […]
Read more10 New York State teachers awarded distance learning scholarships from Internet2’s Community Anchor Program (CAP)
NYSERNet would like to congratulate 10 New York State teachers who were awarded the Distance Learning Scholarship from Internet2’s Community Anchor Program (CAP). These scholarship winners receive free, one-on-one, distance learning programs for their classes through […]
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