Evidence left in rocks is leading scientists to rethink what watery environments looked like on ancient Mars. .
Evidence left in rocks is leading scientists to rethink what watery environments looked like on ancient Mars. .
Part of the reason Anisa Kline chose to pursue a doctorate in geography at The Ohio State University was the practical nature of the research.
“The thing I love about geography is that it is literally grounded in place,” she said. “You’re talking about people and processes happening in a specific place. Everything happens somewhere.”
A new collaborative research project by The Ohio State University’s National Center for the Middle Market (NCMM) and Google Cloud reveals insights into how midsize companies use cloud technology, including drivers, barriers, benefits and challenges of usage.
A science team gains new insight into the atmosphere of a “mini-Neptune,” a class of planet common in the galaxy but about which little is known. .
Imagine you could travel to only 1% of the city where you live – areas that were easily accessible to other residents. That’s the situation for manual wheelchair users traveling by public buses in Columbus, a first-of-its-kind study finds.
An Ohio State University astronomy professor has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences, one of the highest honors a scientist can receive in the U.S.
Findings may aid design of targeted drug delivery into the brain and central nervous system.
Partisan conflict can be largely explained as differing views on two crucial tasks of society, according to a new theory developed by a pair of prominent social scientists.
A scientist at The Ohio State University who studies social relationships in vampire bats has been selected as a member of the inaugural class of Freeman Hrabowski Scholars announced today by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI).
Discovery provides potential clues for Lewy body and frontotemporal dementias.