College of Sciences

Latest News

Facundo Fernandez
Facundo Fernandez is highlighted for work on ambient mass spectrometry
Frances Rivera-Hernández taking field samples in Antarctica in 2015 (Photo Frances Rivera-Hernandez)
Frances Rivera-Hernández and her team will soon head to Antarctica to study an ancient lake bed that may aid in search for past life on Mars, plus clues to climatic changes
Vibrio cholerae bacteria (Photo Wikimedia Commons)
Interdisciplinary researchers discover a new membrane-dissolving toxin that V. cholerae injects into cells, giving science a possible new direction for battling the pathogen
Data vis sonification tool
Georgia Tech researchers have created a data visualization plus sonification approach lets users explore data with visual, auditory, or both modalities.
Bacterial biofilms
CMDI merges disciplines, aggressively recruiting microbiologist ‘superstars’ to take back the high ground from antibiotic-resistant pathogens and emerging diseases — and to harness microbes for new medicines, cleaner environments, and climate solutions.
Linked Robots
New research from lab of Dan Goldman takes advantage of enhanced mobility

Experts In The News

School of Biological Sciences Professor Marvin Whiteley has been named the 2026 recipient of the American Society for Microbiology's D.C. White Award for Interdisciplinary Research. This award recognizes Whiteley’s distinguished accomplishments in interdisciplinary research and mentoring in microbiology.

American Society for Microbiology September 5, 2025

Reproduction is strange in many social insects, but the Iberian harvester ant (Messor ibericus) takes the weirdness to the next level. Queens mate with males of another species and then clone them, researchers report today in Nature, which means this ant is the only known organism that propagates two species by itself. Evolutionary biologist Jonathan Romiguier of the University of Montpellier, who led the team, calls M. ibericus “in a sense, the most complex, colonial life form we know of so far.”

The finding “is almost impossible to believe and pushes our understanding of evolutionary biology,” says Michael Goodisman, an evolutionary biologist and professor in the School of Biological Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology who was not involved with the new research. “Just when you think you’ve seen it all, social insects reveal another surprise."

Science Magazine September 3, 2025

Upcoming Events

Sep
15
2025
"The Long Road Back ... To a Locked Door: Synaptic Barriers to Recovery" – Tim Cope, Georgia Tech
Sep
16
2025
The AI4Science Center will host Pierre Gentine of Columbia University for a talk entitled "Lost in latent land: prediction, understanding and data assimilation through latent spaces for weather and climate".
Sep
17
2025
Featuring | Elliott J. Rouse | Associate Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
Sep
17
2025
This event offers two exciting opportunities for students to learn about career options in the State of Georgia government.
Sep
18
2025
Career Exploration: What can I do with an undergraduate degree in neuroscience? Insight from our Alum.

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.