Building destroyed by Hurricane Ian in Florida.

A Texas A&M University researcher documented and collected valuable data on Florida’s affected structures and coastlines in the wake of Hurricane Ian.

A female researcher wearing safety glasses and a lab coat adjusts the focus on a complex microscope.

Texas A&M University research reveals how the broad electrochemical energy variations found within genetically identical bacteria promote survival against antibiotic treatments.

Dr. Hande Ozcan working with an X-Ray machine.

Dr. Hande Ozcan and Dr. Ibrahim Karaman have discovered a new method to grow single crystals more efficiently and simultaneously control their growth orientation.

A car connected by gas pumps to a grey dumpster full of trash. The dumpster pumps are fueling the car with gas.

Rather than disposing of waste in dumpsters and landfills, Dr. Mark Holtzapple proposes that biomass can be used as a renewable resource.

Dr. Shreya Raghavan and doctoral student Sabrina Vandenheuvel working in the lab.

Dr. Shreya Raghavan was awarded a Method to Extend Research in Time grant by the National Cancer Institute to continue her research on the metastasis of cancer.

Dr. Ned Thomas

Researchers show direct evidence of new mesoatom shapes and symmetries that occur in a special twin boundary in soft matter.

A female student wearing a VR headset and holding controls in a research laboratory.

Researchers at Texas A&M University are building scents into virtual reality environments and looking at the effects of olfactory stimulation on behavioral health — specifically, how multisensory VR can support astronauts during future long-duration missions.

City skyline with the sun in the sky above.

Dr. Zheng O’Neill leads a National Science Foundation-funded project to apply artificial intelligence techniques to design and operate energy-efficient district heat pump systems that serve human needs and behaviors while reducing the carbon footprint of buildings.

Male scientist looking into a piece of equipment for research purposes.

Texas A&M University and the U.S. Army combined efforts to develop new approaches for the accelerated discovery of materials for dangerous environments.