You are here:
News
Researchers at Columbia and Google Quantum AI have developed an algorithm that uses the most quantum bits to date to calculate ground state energy, the lowest-energy state in a quantum mechanical system. The discovery could help make it easier to design new materials.
Poet Wendy Walters helped shape “Fictions of Emancipation: Carpeaux Recast,” which explores slavery and its legacies.
The TC community is joining family, friends, and colleagues in mourning the loss of Brent Renaud (TC'96, M.A. in Sociology and Education) a video journalist who perished Sunday while covering the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
The biggest black hole collisions detected by LIGO may have arisen from a flat disk of gas in a young galaxy with a supermassive black hole at its center, says a new study in Nature.
In his new book, Professor Lee Siegel explains that argument is at the heart of human experience.
Intimate partner violence is a key indicator for poor HIV outcomes.
The finding helps to clarify why magma starts or stops moving below the surface weeks to months to years before an eruption, and could lead to better eruption forecasts.
Associate Director Guy de Lancey says it is a place that blends dance, performance, and tech.
Learn what faculty members think about the unstable and alarming situation of Russia's military incursion in Ukraine.
A landmark study reveals the hidden and potentially deadly costs of climate-related disasters.
Researchers have identified the genes that make domesticated bettas' colors and shapes more flamboyant than those of their wild cousins.
From science to engineering, writing to social sciences, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.
The longtime dean was both an insider and an outsider, says historian Nancy Woloch in her new book.
A new study from the department of psychology reveals how we can adapt our negative memories to make them more positive.
Film Professor Tom Kalin directed a “Pride” episode centered on the struggle for LGBTQ+ rights in the U.S. in the 1950s.