document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2413&skinNameSticky=default">Professor Toh-Ming Lu Named Fellow of the Materials Research Society</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2008)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           Toh-Ming Lu, the R.P. Baker Distinguished Professor of     Physics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, has been named a     lifetime fellow of the Materials Research Society (MRS).        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2396&skinNameSticky=default">Renowned Physicist Named Kodosky Constellation Chair at Rensselaer</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(February 2008)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           Shengbai Zhang, a quantum physicist renowned for his     computational modeling and research in semiconductor defects,     has been named senior chair of Rensselaer&rsquo;s Gail and Jeffrey L.     Kodosky &rsquo;70 Constellation in Physics, Information Technology,     and Entrepreneurship.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2393&skinNameSticky=default">Researchers Develop Darkest Manmade Material</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(January 2008)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           Researchers at Rensselaer and Rice University have created     the darkest material ever made by man.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2392&skinNameSticky=default">Researchers Reveal HIV Peptide&rsquo;s Possible Pathway Into the Cell</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(January 2008)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           Two theoretical physicists at Rensselaer have uncovered what     they believe is the long-sought-after pathway that an HIV     peptide takes to enter healthy cells.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2389&skinNameSticky=default">Physicists Uncover New Solution for Cosmic Collisions</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(January 2008)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           Two theoretical physicists at Rensselaer have used what they     call &ldquo;pen-and-paper math&rdquo; to describe the motion of     interstellar shock waves.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2259&skinNameSticky=default">Newberg Shares Gruber Prize for Discovering Rapid Expansion of Universe</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(July 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           In 1998, two research teams a world apart uncovered a key     truth about our universe &mdash; it was expanding. Fast. One of the     experiments, the Supernova Cosmology Project, was originally a     thesis project for Heidi Jo Newberg, now an associate professor     of physics, applied physics, and astronomy at Rensselaer.     Members of the two research teams are now being honored for     their discovery with one of the top scientific awards in the     field&mdash;the 2007 Gruber Cosmology Prize.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2245&skinNameSticky=default">Students Unlocking Secrets of the Universe at CERN</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(July 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           Two Rensselaer undergraduates are currently at the center of     an experiment that could reveal the origins of the universe.     The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at the European Organization     for Nuclear Research (CERN) in the foothills of the Swiss Alps     is perhaps the largest scientific experiment of our time.     Samuel Punshon-Smith and Mathew Pevarnik, both undergraduate     physics majors, arrived in Switzerland in early July to begin     what they both expect to be a whirlwind dip into the amazing     arena of particle physics.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2100&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Shares Classroom Technologies With Brazil</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(April 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Visitors from Universidade Federal de Sao Joao del-Rei learn about Rensselaer\'s classroom technologies.     </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1939&skinNameSticky=default">Remodeled Hirsch Observatory Holds Open House</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(February 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           Many on campus may never have noticed the large metallic     dome atop the Jonsson-Rowland Science Center, but inside is a     newly redesigned telescope and observatory modeled after some     of the greatest in the country. The Hirsch Observatory has been     completely refurbished, and to celebrate the modern makeover of     the more than 65-year-old observatory, all Rensselaer students,     faculty, and staff are invited to bring their families to an     open house Feb. 18-22 from 7-10 p.m.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1920&skinNameSticky=default">The Society of Physics Students Named Outstanding Chapter, Again</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(February 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           For the second year in a row, the Rensselaer chapter of the     Society for Physics Students (SPS) has been selected by the     national society as an Outstanding SPS Chapter. According to     the commendation letter from the national SPS office, less than     10 percent of SPS chapters nationwide have been so honored.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1894&skinNameSticky=default">RPI Grads everywhere at the American Astronomical Society Meeting in Seattle</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(January 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Astronomers hold two national meetings per year, where colleagues meet and we find out what is going on in all areas of astronomy at once. This year, it seemed that everywhere we looked there was an RPI graduate.      </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1732&skinNameSticky=default">Physics Faculty Awarded Grants</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(September 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The Office of Research has announced the Physics, Applied Physics, and Astronomy r esearch awards for April, May, and June 2006.     </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1665&skinNameSticky=default">School of Science announces new Ph.D. program in Biochemistry and Biophysics</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(August 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The School of Science is adding a new Ph.D. program,     Biochemistry and Biophysics (BCBP), to its 20 other graduate     programs. The BCBP doctorate is part of the Institute-wide     commitment to the development of programs in bioscience and     biotechnology.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1620&skinNameSticky=default">School of Science Research Awards for February and March &#8217;06</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(June 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The Office of Research announced the research awards     ($50,000 and above) for February and March \'06. School of     Science awards include:        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1619&skinNameSticky=default">T-Rays on Campus</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(June 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The Center for Terahertz (THz) Research, under the leadership of Xi-Cheng Zhang, is having another very productive year, bringing in millions of dollars in funding, publishing groundbreaking research, and enhancing its international reputation for preeminence in the field.     </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1618&skinNameSticky=default">Future Chips Constellation Wins DOE Award</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(June 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Rensselaer has received a $1.8 million, three-year grant     from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to develop green and     deep green LEDs that are both more powerful and more efficient     than current technology. These LEDs will be a major step toward     DOE&rsquo;s goal of replacing current lighting technology with     efficient white LEDs by the year 2025, according to Christian     Wetzel, associate professor of physics and a principal     investigator on the grant.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1577&skinNameSticky=default">Department of Physics, Applied Physics, and Astronomy Bestows Awards</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The Department of Physics, Applied Physics, and Astronomy conferred a series of awards and honors at their annual Commencement Luncheon on May 19, 2006.     </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1525&skinNameSticky=default">Matthew Pelliccione wins 1902 Research Prize</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Matthew Pelliccione, class of \'06 - physics, is the winner     of the 1902 Research Prize for his senior thesis, &ldquo;Mound     Formation in Surface Growth.&rdquo;        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1524&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Undergraduate Research Showcased at Event</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       At the annual Undergraduate Research Forum and Awards, 37     projects were judged in one of two categories &mdash; applied design     research or theoretical research. The School of Science swept     the theoretical research category.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1519&skinNameSticky=default">Gwo-Ching Wang Wins William H. Wiley Distinquished Faculty Award</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Gwo-Ching Wang, Department Chair and Professor of Physics,     was awarded the William H. Wiley Distinguished Faculty Award on     May 1, 2006 for her outstanding contributions in surface and     interface ordering phenomena, and her leadership in promoting     research experience for undergraduates and interdisciplinary     graduate education.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1413&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Research Highlighted at American Physical Society Meeting</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       From energy-efficient lighting to flexible &ldquo;nano skins&rdquo; for     a variety of applications, more than 50 Rensselaer researchers     are presenting this week at the American Physical Society (APS)     March Meeting in Baltimore, Md. In addition, Angel Garcia,     senior constellation chaired professor in biocomputation and     bioinformatics and professor of physics, will receive the 2006     Edward A. Bouchet Award by the APS for &ldquo;his contributions to     the understanding of the role of water in the dynamics and     folding of proteins through computer simulations.&rdquo; The award     promotes the participation of underrepresented minorities in     physics by identifying and recognizing a distinguished minority     physicist who has made significant contributions to physics     research.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1395&skinNameSticky=default">The Society of Physics Students Named Outstanding Chapter</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The Rensselaer chapter of the Society for Physics Students (SPS) has been selected by the national society as an Outstanding SPS Chapter for the 2004-05 academic year. According to the commendation letter from the national SPS office, less than 10 percent of SPS chapters nationwide have been so honored     </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1388&skinNameSticky=default">Angel Garcia Awarded NSF Grant To Study Proteins Under Pressure</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(February 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       A Rensselaer researcher has been awarded a five-year,     $947,000 grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to     study how proteins behave under pressure. Angel Garcia, senior     constellation chaired professor in biocomputation and     bioinformatics, seeks to address gaps in scientific knowledge     regarding the role of water pressure in protein structure and     function that could aid in the understanding and treatment of     disease.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1202&skinNameSticky=default">Out and About: Angel Garcia Presents Supercomputing Lecture on Capitol Hill</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(November 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       A Science 101 briefing on the power of high-performance     supercomputing drew 35 congressional staff members on Capitol     Hill Nov. 14. Professor Angel Garcia, senior constellation     chair in bioinformatics and biocomputation at Rensselaer,     served as an invited speaker on how supercomputing is enabling     new advances in molecular biology. He provided an overview and     answered questions at the Science 101 briefing, sponsored by     the Science Coalition to educate congressional staff on basic     science and research topics.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://www.discover.com/issues/dec-05/cover/">Field Guide to the Entire Universe</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(November 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Let\'s face it: You have no idea how to make sense of 70     sextillion stars scattered across 27 billion light-years of     space in the visible universe, not to mention what you should     make of dark matter and dark energy. So let\'s go straight to     the highlights: 9 places in the cosmos that explain everything     you need to know. (From Discover Magazine, Features Prof. Heidi     Newberg)        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1189&skinNameSticky=default">RAA Fellows Award Presented at Robert Resnick Lecture</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(November 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Richard Madey &rsquo;43 received the Rensselaer Alumni Association     (RAA) Fellows Award from the Department of Physics, Applied     Physics, and Astronomy on Friday, Nov. 11. The award was     presented during the 10th Robert Resnick Lecture at Rensselaer,     where Kip Thorne of California Institute of Technology     delivered a lecture on &ldquo;Einstein&rsquo;s General Relativity, from     1905 to 2005: Warped Spacetime, Black Holes, and Gravitational     Waves.&rdquo;        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1091&skinNameSticky=default">Tang Wins AVS Awards</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(October 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Fu Tang, a graduate student in the Department of Physics,     Applied Physics, and Astronomy, has won the 2005 American     Vacuum Society (AVS) graduate research award and the AVS Thin     Film Division Award.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1077&skinNameSticky=default">MRI Pioneer William Edelstein Wins AIP Industrial Physics Prize</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(October 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       William Edelstein, visiting scientist at Rensselaer, has     been named the winner of the 2005-2006 American Institute of     Physics (AIP) Industrial Applications in Physics Prize.     Edelstein was chosen &ldquo;for his pioneering developments leading     to commercialization of high-resolution magnetic resonance     imaging (MRI) for medical applications.&rdquo; The prize will be     given to Edelstein at the Industrial Physics Forum, Nov. 6-8 in     Gaithersburg, Md.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1035&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Researchers Awarded NSF Grant To Study Nano Springs, Rods, Beams</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(September 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Researchers at Rensselaer are exploring the potential of     nanomechanical systems by making and testing springs, rods, and     beams on the nanoscale. They have been awarded a $1.15 million     grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for the     research        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1019&skinNameSticky=default">Physics student awarded APS Scholarship</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(September 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Anton Gereau III, first-year student, has been awarded the     2005-2006 American Physical Scholarship for Minority     Undergraduate Physics Majors.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=996&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Research Featured at 230th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(August 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Rensselaer research is being showcased this week at the     230th national meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS)     in Washington, D.C. Eighteen members of the Rensselaer     community are presenting their work, including a special     invited lecture by President Shirley Ann Jackson and a     terahertz technology symposium organized by Professor Xi-Cheng     Zhang.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=942&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Astrophysicist Chairs New Scientific Survey of Milky Way Galaxy</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(August 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Heidi Newberg, associate professor of physics and astronomy     at Rensselaer, is chairing the science working group of a new     project focused on mapping the Milky Way Galaxy\'s structure and     stellar makeup and compiling data on its origins and evolution.     The recently announced Milky Way survey project, the Sloan     Extension for Galactic Understanding and Exploration (SEGUE),     is one of three new projects included in the Sloan Digital Sky     Survey II (SDSS-II), a three-year extension of a scientific     undertaking that will complete the largest survey of the     universe.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=938&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Astrophysicist Chairs New Scientific Survey of Milky Way Galaxy</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(August 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Heidi Newberg, associate professor of physics and astronomy     at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, is chairing the science     working group of a new project focused on mapping the Milky Way     Galaxy&rsquo;s structure and stellar makeup and compiling data on its     origins and evolution.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_25/b3938629.htm">More Life for Moore&#8217;s Law (BusinessWeek Online)</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(June 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       In the race to produce ever-faster chips, it sometimes feels     like enough is enough. Our desktops have sufficient horsepower     to simulate the birth of galaxies if anyone wants to. Phones     and PDAs are stuffed with fascinating communications tricks     that few people will ever use. So do we still need Moore\'s Law     -- the precept that chip performance should double roughly     every 18 months?        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=738&skinNameSticky=default">Department of Physics, Applied Physics, and Astronomy Gives Awards</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The Department of Physics, Applied Physics, and Astronomy     conferred a series of awards and honors at their annual     Commencement Luncheon on May 20, 2005.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=735&skinNameSticky=default">Undergraduate Research and Innovation Flourishes at Rensselaer</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Undergraduates of Rensselaer\'s Class of 2005 are already     making their mark to help shape the future in cancer research,     nanotechnology, astronomy, and environmental science.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=708&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Undergraduate Team Selected to Receive 2005 SIAM Award for Mathematical Modeling Contest</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(April 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       A Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute undergraduate team has     been selected to receive the 2005 Society for Industrial and     Applied Mathematics (SIAM) Award in the Mathematical Contest in     Modeling, besting competitors from Harvard University,     Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and others.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=676&skinNameSticky=default">Robert Resnick Lecture</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Virginia Trimble was the guest speaker at this year\'s Robert     Resnick Lecture. The lecture, put on by the department of     physics, applied physics, and astromomy, is in its ninth     year.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=894&skinNameSticky=default">New Mathematical Model Predicts Ecological Invasion, Explains How Invasive Species Thrive</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Researchers at Rensselaer and the University at Albany have     proposed a new mathematical model that predicts the survival of     invasive biological species upon introduction to an ecosystem.     The model analyzes the struggle for space between clusters of     invasive species and native species to predict which species     will survive.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=661&skinNameSticky=default">New Mathematical Model Predicts Ecological Invasion, Explains How Invasive Species Thrive</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and     University at Albany have proposed a new mathematical model     that predicts the survival of invasive biological species upon     introduction to an ecosystem. The model analyzes the struggle     for space between clusters of invasive species and native     species to predict which species will survive.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=644&skinNameSticky=default">Ivar Giaever &#8217;64 Retirement Reception</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(February 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The School of Science hosted a retirement reception for Ivar     Giaever \'64, Institute Professor of Science and professor of     physics, on Jan. 26 in the Russell Sage Dining Hall.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=935&skinNameSticky=default">Out and About: Ivar Giaever &rsquo;64 Retirement Reception</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(January 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The School of Science hosted a retirement reception for Ivar Giaever     \'64, Institute Professor of Science and professor of     physics, on Jan. 26 in the Russell Sage Dining Hall.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://www.computer.org/computer/homepage/1004/technews/index.htm">The Lowdown on High-Rise Chips</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(November 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       As today\'s silicon technology reaches its technical limits     in many areas, developers are looking for new ways to design     better chips. According to RPI\'s Associate Research Professor     James Jian-Qiang Lu, there are three main high-rise-chip     integration techniques: multichip stacks, recrystallized     silicon, and monolithic wafer-level 3D integration.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=642&skinNameSticky=default">Renowned Scientist Angel E. Garcia Will Lead New Biocomputation and Bioinformatics Research Constellation</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(November 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Angel E. Garcia, a renowned theoretical physicist in     biomolecular research, has been appointed a senior     constellation chaired professor in biocomputation and     bioinformatics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Garcia will     join Rensselaer on Jan. 1, 2005.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=584&skinNameSticky=default">School of Science Receives NYSTAR Faculty Development Awards</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(October 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute&rsquo;s School of Science will     receive $1.5 million from the state to hire two scientists,     Gov. George Pataki announced Thursday.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=577&skinNameSticky=default">LEDs Promise To Transform Lighting</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(October 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       A Rensselaer research team has created a new type of     reflector that has dramatically improved LED (light-emitting     diode) luminance. The National Science Foundation (NSF)     recently awarded the research team a three-year, $210,000 grant     to move the patented omni-directional reflector to market.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=557&skinNameSticky=default">Elementary Particles and Nuclear Physics Group Receives NSF Grant to Study Structure of Matter</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(September 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Gary Adams, James Napolitano, and Paul Stoler, all     professors in the Department of Physics, Applied Physics, and     Astronomy, are members of the Elementary Particles and Nuclear     Physics Group involved in an international collaboration with a     consortium of laboratories from around the world.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=558&skinNameSticky=default">Physics Professor, Toh-Ming Lu, to Receive the 2004 MRS Medal</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(September 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The MRS (Materials Research Society) has awarded their     annual medal to three scientists, one of whom is Toh-Ming Lu,     R.P. Baker Distinguished Professor of Physics.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://www.rpi.edu/research/magazine/summer04/futurechips_1.html">Smart Lighting</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(July 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Three recognized photonics pioneers have come together at     Rensselaer to form the nucleus of the Future Chips     Constellation, a multidisciplinary group that is conducting     leading-edge research in compound semiconductor materials and     devices. Their goal: enabling significant advances in     communications, lighting, sensing, and imaging.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=233&skinNameSticky=default">Detecting "Dark-Matter" Shower</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(June 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Heidi Newberg, associate professor of physics, suggests that     a &ldquo;highway&rdquo; of dark matter from another galaxy may be showering     down on Earth. The findings may change the way astronomers look     for mysterious cosmic particles, long suspected to outweigh     known atomic matter.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=247&skinNameSticky=default">Quark Matters</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(April 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Rensselaer researchers are part of an international team of     physicists that has provided the best evidence to date of the     existence of a new form of atomic matter, dubbed the     &ldquo;pentaquark.&rdquo;        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=643&skinNameSticky=default">Future Chips Constellation Completed With Two New Faculty Appointments</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Rensselaer has announced the appointment of two new faculty     members, thereby completing its Future Chips Constellation, the     first of several &ldquo;critical mass&rdquo; groupings of world-caliber     faculty in focal research areas. The new faculty are Shawn-Yu     Lin, Ph.D., a recognized authority in photonics research, and     Christian M. Wetzel, Ph.D., a research pioneer in semiconductor     device design and manufacturing.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=249&skinNameSticky=default">Uniting With Only a Few Random Links</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2003)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Information about highly complex systems, such as the spread     of diseases, the rise and fall of financial markets, or     cell-phone communication networks, benefits from large-scale     networked computer simulation.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=248&skinNameSticky=default">Ring Around the Galaxy</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2003)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       In the beginning of the year, a previously unseen band of     stars beyond the edge of the Milky Way galaxy was discovered by     a team of scientists from Rensselaer, Fermi National     Accelerator Laboratory, and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey     (SDSS). The discovery could help to explain how the galaxy was     assembled 10 billion years ago.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=331&skinNameSticky=default">Modeling Random Events</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(November 2001)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Researchers are developing novel computational techniques     that could lead to better simulation of complex systems, such     as the spread of diseases, the evolution of financial markets,     and the flow of Internet traffic.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');