Four researchers stand in front of dying crops.

Dr. Joshua Peeples is collaborating with faculty from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences to develop a centralized framework to analyze data collected from Texas A&M AgriLife Research's new state-of-the-art Plant Growth and Phenotyping Facility.

Students hold glass awards while they stand on a stage by a podium.

Subsea engineering graduate student Mohammed Shafi from the Department of Multidisciplinary Engineering was a member of the Texas A&M University team that took first place in a recent oil and gas competition of student designs.

Dr. Tianbo Yang standing next to a whiteboard

To correctly diagnose and treat patients with long COVID-19, Dr. Tianbao Yang has received a $3.7 million grant to develop self-supervised deep learning technologies that recognize subtypes of post-COVID lung progression phenotypes.

A man and woman holding a photograph together.

In honor of their parents’ support, Denise ’76 and Ken Meyer ’75 established the Imogene and Carl Lindley and Fay and Robert Meyer CVEN Excellence Endowment to support first-generation students.

Olivia Mills stands in front of a crumbling castle in Ireland.

During Olivia Mills's internship abroad in Ireland, she found that the country's rich architectural history enhanced her degree's technical knowledge.

Coral reef in the ocean with sea life swimming around it.

An interdisciplinary team of researchers demonstrated that coral can be preserved through a new technique called isochoric vitrification.

Side-by-side headshots of Siddhesh Borkar, Bhavya Jaiswal, Annie Lee, Niranjan Sitapure and Suyash Oka.

Five students in the Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering said the skills they developed and their experiences at their internships will help them succeed in their future careers.

A worn piece of silver metal with many cracks and surface imperfections as seen on a microscopic scale from a scanning electron microscope. A large vertical crack splits the left third of the image from the rest, and multiple raised and lowered textures fill the spaces between many smaller cracks throughout.

A recent surprise observation of metal healing itself during fracture experiments at Sandia National Laboratories has provided the first experimental evidence of a theory proposed a decade ago by Texas A&M University researcher Dr. Michael Demkowicz.

Five gentlemen posing for a photo holding a giant money check

The American Bureau of Shipping (ABS) partnered with Texas A&M University to establish the ABS Laboratory for Ocean Innovation and Ocean Engineering Department Head Chair.

Man shown talking on smartphone while seated at desk on left with a graphic illustration of ear speaker vibrations at top of phone revealing sensitive identity, gender and speech information to a cartoon spy on right.

Researchers from five academic institutions, including Texas A&M University, investigated how ear speaker vibrations and motion sensor data on newer smartphones could compromise caller information security.