College of Sciences

Latest News

Georgia Tech Space Week
Colleges of Sciences, Engineering continue their collaboration on space science projects, including NASA’s return to the Moon
Scialog® announces winners of $1.1 million for "Signatures of Life in the Universe" program.
The duo of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences associate professors are among 20 Scialog® winners of $1.1 million in funding. Glass and Reinhard are also among AGU’s latest cohort of annual awardees.
Controlled Wildland Burn
A new grant will allow Georgia Tech researchers to create strategies to protect schoolchildren from harmful wildland fire emissions
College of Sciences Dean Susan Lozier welcomes guests to the September Sciences Celebration (Photo Renay San Miguel)
Recipients of 2020-2021 awards recognized at ceremony after pandemic delay; new faculty members also welcomed
EcoCommons Grass
Bringing together a wide range of local and global experts to showcase climate change solutions, the event will be held in a fully virtual, online format for the second year due to the pandemic.
Carbon Membrane Materials
Researchers at Georgia Tech have uncovered new insights into the fabrication of carbon membranes that have the potential to drive significant cost savings once the solution for xylene isolation separation is scaled for industrial use.

Experts In The News

Tens of thousands of people in the Southeast were jolted by a magnitude 4.1 earthquake on Saturday, May 10. Seismologist and professor in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Zhigang Peng joined FOX Weather to talk about why so many people in the East reported feeling the earthquake and just how common they are in the region.

A similar story also appeared at 11 Alive News.

Fox Weather May 11, 2025

In a study published in Chem, scientists from Scripps Research and the Georgia Institute of Technology question the validity of the “formose reaction” hypothesis. This hypothesis proposes that simple formaldehyde molecules reacted under early Earth conditions to form ribose. But the new findings reveal a key limitation: under controlled experimental conditions, the formose reaction does not yield linear sugars like ribose. Instead, it predominantly produces branched sugar structures, which are incompatible with the formation of RNA.

“Our results cast doubt on the formose reaction as the basis for the formation of linear sugars,” says co-senior author Charles Liotta, Regents’ Professor in the School of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering.

SciTechDaily May 11, 2025

Upcoming Events

May
14
2025
The campus community is invited to join us for a town hall to review the Institute’s phased approach toward a more in-person work model for the 2025-26 academic year.

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.