News Archive

People in Togo’s capital city are often exposed to unsafe levels of small particles in the air they breathe.

In honor of the Columbia Lion's 112th birthday on April 5, we're compiling our favorite mascot snapshots from over the decades. 

Miller, vice president and global enterprise editor at The Associated Press, has been named administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes after a broad search.

Ask yourself some of the following questions to assess your COVID-19 risk.

Hannah Assadi’s “The Stars Are Not Yet Bells” follows a woman from her youth during the Depression through the onset of Alzheimer’s.

A high-speed 3D microscope developed at Columbia could transform surgery and tissue analysis.

PhD student Daniel Fraga is studying ‘green’ hydrogen as an alternative to fossil fuels while sharing lighter moments on TikTok.

Lights! Camera! Quantum! The theoretical quantum physicist by day and actor by night explains how she blends science and art.

Trees are migrating as Earth’s climate warms. The ‘shotgun scientist’ is tracking and sharing their movements.

Arden Hegele explores what Jane Austen and Alfred Tennyson shared with anatomy and pathology in “Romantic Autopsy.”

From science to engineering, writing to social sciences, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.

A third of regenerating areas in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest were cut down again, most after just 4 to 8 years.

Students, faculty, and staff will have the day off on Monday, June 20. 

The playwriting professor and the composer discuss their collaboration at an online School of the Arts event.

Think you're a movie buff? A Columbia know-it-all? Test your mettle with this Academy Awards-themed quiz.