Manhattan College’s Society of Physics Students Wins Outstanding Chapter Award
The chapter's accomplishments and activities during the 2022-2023 academic year led to the coveted recognition.
The chapter's accomplishments and activities during the 2022-2023 academic year led to the coveted recognition.
Bart Horn, Ph.D., wants to create opportunities for undergraduates and introduce a new generation of researchers to the field
The Kakos School of Science will introduce an astronomy minor in the fall.
Rebecca Coglianese ’23, is passionate about her future in astrophysics while battling a cancer diagnosis.
The Manhattan College alumnus will work alongside NASA scientists and mentors at the organization’s facility as he researches spacecraft landings.
Díaz-López is currently enrolled in the mechanical engineering Ph.D. program at Johns Hopkins University.
A mechanical engineering major, Diaz is one of 496 students nationwide to gain the award.
The minor is designed to create critical thinkers for the digital age.
Mentored by Rostislav Konoplich, Ph.D., the physics major was able to spend a summer at CERN in Switzerland.
A variety of students and alumni are putting their knowledge to work on South Campus.
The future three-story facility will modernize the facilities supporting the College’s engineering and science programs.
The newest campus addition is the cornerstone of Manhattan College’s modernization of facilities, supporting its engineering and science programs.
A National Science Foundation grant allowed a Manhattan College senior to assist in world-renowned science experiments being conducted this summer in Switzerland.
Manhattan College senior Dylan Gray was a featured panelist at New American Colleges & Universities panel.
Now a scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, John Remo's ’63 career has focused on defense against deadly Earth-bound asteroids.
Dylan Gray ’15 is conducting research with Rostislav Konoplich, Ph.D., professor of physics, who is currently doing research on the Higgs boson project. Together, they are using ROOT, a special data analysis framework software used by physicists at CERN to analyze the calculated results of the decay of muons.
Rostislav Konoplich, Ph.D. travels to and from Geneva to collect data from the Large Hadron Collider as part of the team working on the Higgs boson discovery.