News

Ten takeaways from "The New Golden Age of Astronomy: Hubble’s Universe Today" celebrating the 100th anniversary of Edwin Hubble’s groundbreaking discovery that our galaxy isn’t alone in the universe.
In the first Neighborhood Lecture of 2025, Carnegie Science welcomed its 12th President, John Mulchaey, to its Broad Branch Road campus for a journey through 100 years of astrophysical breakthroughs.
Join us Thursday mornings throughout October for seminars on the theme of redox controls on planetary processes. Continuing the series Vincenzo Stagno of Università di Roma will present, "Redox and ...
This winter, a delegation from Dallas’ Perot Museum of Nature and Science visited Carnegie Science’s Las Campanas Observatory, deepening a programmatic partnership that shared the wonders of the Great ...
The Drosophila Gateway™ Vector collection is a set of 68 Gateway-based vectors designed to express epitope-tagged proteins in Drosophila culture cells or flies. At its core is Invitrogen's Gateway™ ...
Carnegie Science empowers our investigators to pursue the biggest questions of our time, advancing discoveries that transform our understanding of life, planets, and the broader universe. Our research ...
Carnegie's newest scientific division, Biosphere Sciences & Engineering, is devoted to disrupting the traditional, siloed perspective on research in the life sciences and pursuing an integrated ...
How to achieve net zero emissions goals. Over the past few years, a wave of actors–governments at all levels, electric utilities, companies, and educational institutions–have set targets to reach net ...
Thirty years ago, astronomers began to discover planets around other stars -- exoplanets -- and sparked a scientific revolution. Today we remain in its throes. Our most advanced telescopes on ...
In 1983, at the age of 81, Barbara McClintock received the news that would cement her place in scientific history. She had won a solo Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for her discovery of ...
What if Mars once hosted life? That’s the big question Anushree Srivastava is helping to answer. As an astrobiologist, she studies some of the most extreme environments on Earth—like Arctic impact ...