College of Sciences

Latest News

Artist rendering of early Earth (Photo credit: NASA)
A new study is taking the air out of a hypothesis linking early Earth’s oxygenation to larger, more complex organisms. Georgia Tech researchers report a more complex effect
Bernard Schutz
Schutz is honored for seminal contributions to relativistic astrophysics, including the analytical foundation in gravitational wave detection. The Center for Relativistic Astrophysics member helped spark Tech’s CRA, as well as the Max Planck Institute.
Georgia Tech 2021 College of Sciences Student Awards
Six students gain special recognition for accomplishments, research in a variety of disciplines
Spring 2021 CIC Winners. Pictured clockwise from top-left: Robert Stout, Carl Demolder, Daniele Gavetti De Mari, and Phillip M. Kinney.
Two student teams won this year’s Georgia Tech’s 2021 spring semester Convergence Innovation Competition (CIC).
Brady Bove is a graduating student majoring in biomedical engineering with a minor in leadership studies and a certificate in cognitive psychology.
Brady Bove reflects on biomedical engineering, leadership studies, cognitive psychology, senior design, meeting friends and her fiancé, and a favorite Georgia Tech memory — involving classical physics and a box of Sublime Doughnuts on a Friday night.
Yassin Watson is a graduating student with dual degrees in biology and industrial engineering, plus dual minors in social justice and physiology.
Watson, who is graduating with dual degrees in biology and industrial engineering, and minors in social justice and physiology, shares six years of adventures at Tech and exploring biology, engineering, health and wellness, and outer space.

Experts In The News

This week could be a jackpot for birders in Georgia, as an estimated 10 million will fly every night over the state. When they aren't flying, they'll be on the ground feasting. In an 11Alive interview, Benjamin Freeman, assistant professor in the School of Biological Sciences, discusses the “river of migrating birds” over Georgia skies:

"So most of these small birds, they're actually... flying at night. So when they're flying, they're spending so much energy they're heating up, so they like to fly when it's cool at night. And they're flying a couple thousand feet up. They're flying all night and then sometime in the morning they'll land and they'll spend the day looking for food. And then the next night, they'll often rise up again and keep flying north, so they're flying a couple 100 miles a night.”

Discover the full interview here.

A similar story also appeared at The Atlanta Journal Constitution.

11 Alive April 28, 2025

Biofilms have emergent properties: traits that appear only when a system of individual items interacts. It was this emergence that attracted School of Physics Associate Professor Peter Yunker to the microbial structures. Trained in soft matter physics — the study of materials that can be structurally altered — he is interested in understanding how the interactions between individual bacteria result in the higher-order structure of a biofilm

Recently, in his lab at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Yunker and his team created detailed topographical maps of the three-dimensional surface of a growing biofilm. These measurements allowed them to study how a biofilm’s shape emerges from millions of infinitesimal interactions among component bacteria and their environment. In 2024 in Nature Physics, they described the biophysical laws that control the complex aggregation of bacterial cells.

The work is important, Yunker said, not only because it can help explain the staggering diversity of one of the planet’s most common life forms, but also because it may evoke life’s first, hesitant steps toward multicellularity.

Quanta Magazine April 21, 2025

Upcoming Events

May
13
2025
Research Town Hall Hosted by Tim Lieuwen
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.