COS News

  • Research
    AI and physics
    “The basic premise is that AI can help us do better physics, and something that is less expected is that physics can also help us understand AI better,” said Northeastern professor James Halverson.

    AI and physics have more in common than you might think.

  • Research
    Mark Patterson
    Formed by superheated glacial water from the last ice age, the hydrothermal vents Professor Mark Patterson studies have been bubbling beneath the fjord for centuries.

    Professor receives Fulbright to explore one of the world’s most unique hydrothermal vents

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  • From co-op to CEO, this grad student aims to speed up climate change solutions

    From co-op to CEO, this grad student aims to speed up climate change solutions

    Northeastern’s Jenna Woods studied the mineral olivine on an undergraduate co-op. Now she heads a company that aims to make it part of the global climate change solution.
  • Quantum computing research earns professor prestigious Cottrell Scholar Award

    Quantum computing research earns professor prestigious Cottrell Scholar Award

    Yizhi You, an assistant physics professor, was named a Cottrell Scholar, which is bestowed on promising early-career academics studying chemistry, physics or astronomy.
  • Emiko Tonachel ’29, Biology

    Emiko Tonachel ’29, Biology

    Emiko Tonachel, a biology major with philosophy minor, placed second in the 2026 COS Pitch Competition for Mucoadhesive hydrogel system for localized drug delivery in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients. Learn more about the inspiration behind the research.
  • Soumya Raguraman ’27, Behavioral Neuroscience

    Soumya Raguraman ’27, Behavioral Neuroscience

    Soumya Raguraman, a behavioral neuroscience major with minors in business administration and public health, placed third in the 2026 COS Pitch Competition for LabMatch: The Undergraduate Research Matching Platform. Learn more about how this idea came about.
  • Andre Bancu ’29, Cell and Molecular Biology

    Andre Bancu ’29, Cell and Molecular Biology

    Andre Bancu won first place in the 2026 COS Pitch Competition for The Role of Transient Bioelectric Disruption in Heritable Chromatin State Changes in Dugesia japonica. Learn more about his research idea and the impact he hopes to make.
  • Artemis II space launch ‘politically important’ in new era of space competition, expert says

    Artemis II space launch ‘politically important’ in new era of space competition, expert says

    Northeastern astrophysicist Jonathan Blazek notes that Artemis II “is still essentially an experimental vehicle.”
  • Where are the women? Researchers are on a quest for more representation in medical research

    Where are the women? Researchers are on a quest for more representation in medical research

    Despite constituting half the population, female subjects are still underrepresented in medical trials. At Northeastern University, a cohort of researchers including Professor Rebecca Shansky is trying to close that gender gap.
  • Science in the Capital: Northeastern Undergrads at ASBMB 2026

    Science in the Capital: Northeastern Undergrads at ASBMB 2026

    Northeastern University students traveled to Washington, D.C. to attend the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology’s (ASBMB) annual meeting.
  • Nature report links wildlife trends to human well-being

    Nature report links wildlife trends to human well-being

    Professor Brian Helmuth and Professor John Coley lead research chapter on the human connection to nature and its importance for the future of the planet.
  • What ‘Project Hail Mary’ gets right – and wrong – about astrophysics, according to an astrophysicist

    What ‘Project Hail Mary’ gets right – and wrong – about astrophysics, according to an astrophysicist

    The Ryan Gosling-led science fiction movie puts science at the center of the frame. Assistant Professor Jacqueline McCleary breaks down whether this space-faring adventure holds up under the microscope.
  • Alien fever! Why Obama, Trump, Steven Spielberg and astronomy students are talking about extraterrestrial life

    Alien fever! Why Obama, Trump, Steven Spielberg and astronomy students are talking about extraterrestrial life

    Why Obama and Steven Spielberg think aliens are real, explained by teaching professor Stefan Kautsch.
  • Loneliness is an epidemic. Social risk-taking offers an opportunity to make connections

    Loneliness is an epidemic. Social risk-taking offers an opportunity to make connections

    Assistant professor Alexandra Rodman emphasizes that Wellness Week encourages “social risk-taking” and connecting with others in person.