Sarah Orr headshot
As part of an $11.6 million research initiative, Biological Sciences postdoctoral fellow Sarah Orr will leverage a new USDA Fellowship to study the impact of synthetic pesticides on bumblebees — a key pollinator for U.S. agricultural production.
NSF and NIH Funded Postdocs can register to attend PHIL 6000 in Fall 2014 through OSP Training
Pictured (from left to right): Nicolas Somers, Best Lightning Talk Overall, Gulcin Arslan Azizoglu, Best Research Talk Overall, Karena Nguyen, Assistant Director for Postdoctoral Services, Namrata Dey Roy, Best Talk from the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts, Zhe Guang, Best Research Talk from the College of Engineering. 
Six Tech postdocs were announced as winners of the 2022 Fall Postdoctoral Research Symposium, which took place on Friday, Oct. 28.
Pictured (from left to right): Nicolas Somers, Best Lightning Talk Overall, Gulcin Arslan Azizoglu, Best Research Talk Overall, Karena Nguyen, Assistant Director for Postdoctoral Services, Namrata Dey Roy, Best Talk from the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts, Zhe Guang, Best Research Talk from the College of Engineering. 
6 Tech postdocs were announced as winners of the 2022 Fall Postdoctoral Research Symposium, which took place on Friday, Oct. 28.
The Dave Johnson coal-fired power plant in central Wyoming. Credit: Wikimedia Commons CC 2.0 Generic Goebel
This is what could happen if all endangered regulations that help in the fight against harmful ozone go away.
Benjamin's dissertation, “Swallowing a World: Globalization and the Maximalist Novel,” has been awarded the Josephine A. Roberts LSU Alumni Association 2018 Distinguished Dissertation Award, which goes to the dissertation that makes the most significant “
As university research has become more complex and interdisciplinary, laboratory teams have grown in size, with increasing numbers of specialists in such areas such as statistical analysis, electron microscopy or mass spectrometry. (Georgia Tech photo)
A new study examines the roles of supporting scientists in the research enterprise.
Georgia Tech undergraduate student Lillian Chen demonstrates how she and colleague Alex Hubbard studied snakes as they moved through an arena covered with shag carpet to mimic sand. (Photo: Allison Carter, Georgia Tech)
A new study shows how the motion of snakes moving across a sandy surface can be affected by obstacles.
Image shows simulation of gravitational waves produced when two binary black holes collide. (Credit: Center for Relativistic Astrophysics)
A new catalog of cataclysmic events supports the development of gravitational wave astronomy.
A clownfish peers out of an anemone in a tank at Georgia Aquarium. Anemones usually sting, kill and eat fish, but not clownfish. Georgia Tech researchers found that the microbial colonies in the slime covering clownfish shifted markedly when the nested in an anemone. Could the microbes be putting out chemical messengers that pacify the fish killer? Credit: Georgia Tech / Ben Brumfield
Why the fish-killing anemone spares the clownfish is a scientific mystery that Georgia Tech marine microbiologists are now tackling in fish mucus.