Home

Recent News from Columbia

Research & Discovery

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s observations of what is thought to be the first-ever recorded planetary engulfment event.
A Close Look at a Planet Swallowed by a Star Yields a Surprise

Black women, middle-aged adults, and lower-income consumers are more likely to use products with potential health risks.

In fusion, powerful magnets contain high-energy plasma that is far hotter than the center of the Sun.
Columbia Engineering Launches the Columbia Fusion Research Center

The new center will help address global energy challenges, contribute to sustainable climate solutions, and create a new industry and associated employment.

An illustration of two brains.
First-Ever Atlas of Brain’s Mitochondria Reveals New Details on Brain Function

Little had been known about how the tiny energy processors influence brain health.

Campus & Community

Columbia University graduates, in their robes, gather near The Thinker on the school's Morningside campus.
Here's Every Columbia 2025 Class Day Speaker We Know (So Far)

From a deep dive into the whale who played Free Willy to a treatise on censorship and surveillance on the border, add these to your queue.

Columbia University student Samia Breir
This Grad Student Is Drawn to Numbers and Risk Analysis

For Samia Breir, coming to Columbia University was about “being in the right place at the right time with the right people.”

Several university students and researchers discuss poster content near blue branding which reads Columbia AI Summit on a big screen at Columbia University.
Columbia News Quiz: March 2025

Test your knowledge of the past month's news and events at Columbia with questions on Ivy League titles, developmental psychology, and much more.

National & Global Affairs

school of social work blog post
The Power of Team Science in the HEALing Communities Study

Members of the Columbia School of Social Work community recently participated in the first three sessions of this innovative study.

economic struggles, woman with head in hand/shutterstock
When Economic Struggles Foster Self-Interest, Not Universal Compassion

A Columbia Business School study shows that experiencing a recession in young adulthood leads to lasting support for wealth redistribution—but mostly for one’s own group.

Global Turkey earthquake scene
From Rubble to Resilience: How Turkey Recovers After the 2023 Earthquake

Can a disaster zone become a model for resilient urban development? Columbia Global thinks so.