A man and two women smiling at a restaurant.
A man with a clipboard and hard hat monitoring a nuclear reactor from a distance.

A new artificial intelligence tool developed by Texas A&M researchers could support nuclear engineers and operators by providing real-time insights for advanced reactor systems.

A headshot of Komal Ilyas on a maroon background.

Komal Ilyas in the computer science and engineering department was awarded a prestigious fellowship to support her pursuit of a Ph.D. in computer science.

A building with trees and grass, and text highlighting the college’s graduate program ranking in the top 10 of public graduate engineering programs in the 2026 U.S. News and World Report rankings.

The college’s graduate program ranks No. 8 among public graduate engineering programs and No. 14 overall in the 2026 U.S. News and World Report rankings.

Two people sitting at a desk.

Researchers from the Urban Resilience AI Lab have created a deep learning framework to rate community resilience and risk based on interdependent factors.

A woman in a lab coat examines a monitor intently.

The two-part biodesign class prepares Texas A&M students for the medical device industry by tasking them with real problems for real people.

Akshaj Kumar and Valerie McNeill standing together and smiling.

Texas A&M’s Akshaj Kumar and Valerie McNeill leveraged their college experiences and entrepreneurship skills to pitch their startup to investors at the Austin-based conference on March 13-14.

Three people standing together and smiling.

Texas A&M and University of Texas at Austin petroleum engineering students teamed up for the Aggie-Longhorn Leading Innovation in Energy Symposium (ALLIES) to bridge the gap between academia and industry.

A researcher examining material in a test tube.

Researchers are uncovering how nanoplastics and heavy metals interact in a controlled hydroponic model, revealing new insights to food safety.

An aerial image of the Amazon River.

Texas A&M University civil and environmental engineering researcher secures NASA fellowship to study Amazon River water loss from evaporation.