In The News: College of Sciences

DailyMail.com

Scientists may have found a way to disable harmful bacteria from being able to sicken millions of people.

MarketWatch

The United system, known as Wilma, boards passengers in order of window, middle and aisle seats. But it may not relieve all the bottlenecks, industry professionals argue.

CBS News

The airline said in an internal memo that it will implement the plan on Oct. 26. The plan – called WILMA, for window, middle and aisle -- was tested at several locations and deemed to shave up to two minutes off boarding time. Variations of the WILMA approach have existed for many years.

phys.org

The legendary Alexander Fleming, who famously discovered penicillin, once said "never to neglect an extraordinary appearance or happening." And the path of science often leads to just that. New UNLV research is turning the page in our understanding of harmful bacteria and how they turn on certain genes, causing disease in our bodies.

KNPR News

Welcome to UNLV. Today is the first of our four live shows from campus and Greenspun Hall during this, the university’s Homecoming Week.

KNPR News

Welcome to UNLV. Today is the first of our four live shows from campus and Greenspun Hall during this, the university’s Homecoming Week.

Physics World

More than 500 free-floating planetary-mass objects have been discovered wandering through the Orion Nebula thanks to new observations by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). Most bizarrely, about 40 of these newfound objects in the nebula’s Trapezium Cluster exist in wide binary pairs, confounding expectations about how these so-called “rogue planets” form.

Nevada Independent

From Winnemucca to Las Vegas, Nevadans are in a position to see the eclipse better than almost anywhere else

Nevada Current

Summer monsoons in the Southwest are difficult to forecast with total accuracy, but the future of the temperamental rainstorms under climate change is an even bigger mystery.

Discourse On Development

Scientists are studying mineral deposits in the caves of the Grand Canyon to understand the impacts of climate change.

The Week

They chose an ancient calcium projection, called stalagmite, from the floor of an undisturbed Grand Canyon cave and studied its geochemistry. The research team was led by the ҳ| 鶹ýӳ, and included the University of New Mexico.

StudyFinds

The Grand Canyon, known for its majestic valleys and millennia-old rock layers, has now unveiled another marvel — its extensive cave systems that could potentially unlock secrets about climate change.