The system has won the Defense Counterintelligence & Security Agency Award for Excellence in Counterintelligence for the second time. The honor comes as foreign agents attempt to steal COVID-19-related research.
An online tool developed by the Texas A&M Natural Resources Institute will help with the development of wind energy projects compatible with the state's military installations.
From left: Texas A&M professors Dr. George Pharr, Dr. Karl ‘Ted’ Hartwig, Dr. Michael J. Demkowicz and Dr. Alan Needleman form part of a team of researchers that will work on the Center for Research Excellence on Dynamically Deformed Solids project. (Justin Baetge/Texas A&M College of Engineering) By Elizabeth…
Vladislav Yakovlev has been developing a more efficient way of propagating light through an opaque medium. By Marcus Misztal, Texas A&M University College of Engineering The inner workings of the human brain have always been a subject of great interest. Unfortunately, it is fairly difficult to view brain structures or…
By Richard Nira, Texas A&M University College of Architecture In the digital age, people rely more and more on advice — driving directions, weather reports, dining suggestions and fitness tips — generated by a computational process, or algorithm. Researchers at Texas A&M are examining these computations in an effort…
By Christina Sumners, Texas A&M University Health Science Center When a soldier in the field is exposed to an infectious agent, it’s a race against time to get him or her back to a hospital for care. But what if that ticking clock could be paused, or at least…