On Wednesday, check out an event where science meets art.
On Wednesday, check out an event where science meets art.
McMaster University physics professor Graeme Luke, senior fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research and fellow of the American Physical Society, will deliver the Canadian Association of Physicists’ annual undergraduate lecture Tuesday, February 13, in Alumni Hall’s McPherson Lounge.
Dr. Luke will discuss “Exotic Probes and Extreme Conditions Reveal New States of Quantum Matter” at 3 p.m.
The Forensic Sciences program is starting a new stream of Information Technology for students completing their honours degrees.
The inaugural SCAN Health Virtual Business Case Competition open February 5.
Biology professor Nigel Hussey delivered the keynote address at the 2018 Canadian Conference for Fisheries Research earlier this month.
The University of Windsor’s Christian Trudeau says he’s honored to be featured in an upcoming special journal issue commemorating Nobel Prize-winning economist Lloyd Shapley.
The issue, scheduled to be published early this year in Games and Economics Behavior, will contain original research articles related to the many contributions Dr. Shapley made during his career.
“I had never met Dr. Shapley personally but I’ve read tons of his work,” Dr. Trudeau said. “To be associated, even as far as this to what he’s done, is a great honour.”
Go Code Girl, February 24 on the UWindsor campus, will inspire girls and equip them with skills and confidence to pursue education in computing.
A new scholarship sponsored by the Friends of Ojibway Prairie will encourage research into conservation issues.
A gala dinner-dance January 20 will benefit the Miracle League of Amherstburg.
The Great Lakes will have a network of well-equipped guardians thanks to a plan hatched by a UWindsor researcher with funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation and Ontario’s Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science and Ministry of Economic Development and Growth.
Aaron Fisk and his nine collaborators will receive $15.9 million for the Real-time Aquatic Ecosystem Observation Network (RAEON), a collaborative research project which will provide infrastructure and data management for Canadian scientists to carry-out cutting-edge research on freshwater ecosystems.