College of Sciences

Latest News

Congratulations to our 2025 Distinguished Alumni: Margaret Beier, Ph.D.; Rutt Bridges; Frank Cullen, Ph.D.; Jack McCallum, M.D., Ph.D.; Nathan Meehan, Ph.D., P.E.; Kelly Sepcic Pfeil, Ph.D.; Kristel Topping, Ph.D.; John Sutherland, Ph.D.

Congratulations to the 2025 College of Sciences Distinguished Alumni Award winners.

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Grants include projects on improving seating surfaces for wheelchair users, easing the transition home after stroke rehabilitation, evaluating lower limb exoskeletons, and using AI in remote rehabilitation.

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Liming, a centuries-old agricultural practice, can improve crop yield and greenhouse gas reduction. 

La Fête Wine Company Founder and CEO Donae Burston (Industrial Engineering 1998), Norman Chu (Electrical Engineering 1984), and Friends of Sciences Steering Committee Member Kathy Wilson-Chu raise a toast to Georgia Tech.

Alumni raised a glass to science, connection, and Ramblin' Wreck pride.

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Inaugural Cohort of Georgia Tech’s Research Leadership Academy Announced

John Etnyre

Featuring world-leading mathematicians at the forefront of their fields, ICM 2026 will be held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in July. Known for his expertise, Etnyre will speak on the topic of Geometry.

Experts In The News

In a new study published in Geophysical Research Letters, Georgia Tech physical oceanographer Susan Lozier and researcher Yao Fu shed light on the shifting dynamics of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). Their findings, produced in collaboration with an international team of scientists, reveal shifts across surface and deep ocean currents, with implications for climate prediction and ocean heat transport. This research underscores the importance of sustained observational efforts in understanding long-term ocean variability.

Geophysical Research Letters September 27, 2025

We may never agree on what AGI or “humanlike” AI means, or what suffices to prove it. As AI advances, machines will still make mistakes, and people will point to these and say the AIs aren’t really intelligent. Anna Ivanova, an assistant professor in the School of Psychology at Georgia Tech, was on a panel recently, and the moderator asked about AGI timelines. “We had one person saying that it might never happen,” Ivanova told me, “and one person saying that it already happened.” So the term “AGI” may be convenient shorthand to express an aim—or a fear—but its practical use may be limited. In most cases, it should come with an asterisk, and a benchmark.

IEEE Spectrum September 22, 2025

Upcoming Events

Oct
08
2025
This signature networking event brings together current College of Sciences students and distinguished Georgia Tech alumni for an evening of conversation, connection, and career exploration. 
Oct
09
2025
How to build and maintain your professional community.
Oct
10
2025
Join the Spatial Ecology and Paleontology Lab for Fossil Fridays! Become a fossil hunter and help discover how vertebrate communities have changed through time.
Oct
13
2025
The Institute for Data Engineering and Science (IDEaS) will host a one-day workshop on Monday, October 13, to explore how AI/ML can drive the next wave of advances in science and engineering at Georgia Tech.
Oct
13
2025
Join Woodruff Arts Center for an evening with New York Times best-selling Author Susan Magsamen.

Spark: College of Sciences at Georgia Tech

Welcome — we're so glad you're here. Learn more about us in this video, narrated by Susan Lozier, College of Sciences Dean and Sutherland Chair.