Etel Solingen named Berlin Prize Fellow

UCI political scientist to advance work on geopolitics

Will homeschooling hurt students’ learning?

KFMZ, July 31, 2020

Huolin Xin receives early career award from DOE Office of Science

The U.S. Department of Energy has chosen Houlin Xin, UCI assistant professor of physics & astronomy, as an awardee in its DOE Office of Science Early Career Research Program. Xin will receive $150,000 per year for five years to support his project to develop transmission electron microscopy imaging technologies for making lithium-ion battery electrodes more […]

Will homeschooling hurt students’ learning?

News4JAX, May 11, 2020

Will homeschooling hurt students’ learning?

WXOW, May 6, 2020 (Video)

Dani Molina joins UCI as director of the Veteran Services Center

The Army veteran will continue campus commitment for serving veterans

Huolin Xin is awarded $2.5 million grant to research next-generation lithium-ion batteries

Huolin Xin, UCI assistant professor of physics & astronomy, has been awarded $2.5 million by the U.S. Department of Energy to advance research in next-generation lithium-ion batteries. His project is one of 42 supported by an $80 million fund for promising vehicle technologies to enable more affordable mobility, strengthen domestic energy security, reduce our dependence […]

Shipping in ice-free Arctic Ocean could have cooling effect on climate, simulations show

Sea ice is melting due to global warming, enabling greater maritime access to the Arctic Ocean. Emissions from transoceanic cargo ships taking advantage of this could either warm the climate further by darkening snow and ice surfaces or cool it by enhancing cloud reflectance. In a study published recently in the American Geophysical Union journal […]

Barbara Dosher

Dosher, Solingen honored by National Academy of Sciences for research achievements

Social sciences scholars awarded for work on human cognition, nuclear proliferation

Etel Solingen’s Nuclear Logics receives top book award in political science

‘Carrot and stick’ theory could help curb proliferation of nuclear weapons