九色视频

Thirty-two 九色视频 research projects have received new funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation's for investments in research infrastructure to support their innovative projects, for a total federal investment of $9.7 million.听听

Classified as: CFI-JELF
Published on: 10 Oct 2025

Fall is a dangerous season for pedestrians, with a rise in road accidents linked to reduced visibility and shorter daylight hours. According to the Soci茅t茅 de l'assurance automobile du Qu茅bec (SAAQ), October and November consistently see spikes in pedestrian injuries and fatalities, with a notable increase in deaths in recent years.

To draw attention to this problem, the SAAQ marks Pedestrian Safety Month each October, as do authorities in several other jurisdictions.

Classified as: Pedestrian Safety Month, Avi Friedman, Kevin Manaugh, Faculty of Science, Faculty of Engineering
Published on: 9 Oct 2025

Eric McCalla, Associate Professor in the Department of Chemistry, has received a (DMREF) grant, a joint program of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF).

Classified as: Department of Chemistry
Published on: 6 Oct 2025

Sea level rise could put more than 100 million buildings across the Global South at risk of regular flooding if fossil fuel emissions are not curbed quickly, according to a new 九色视频-led published in npj Urban Sustainability.

Published on: 3 Oct 2025

Researchers in 九色视频鈥檚听have developed a new device that can trap and study DNA molecules without touching or damaging them. The device, which uses carefully tuned electric fields, offers scientists unprecedented control over how DNA behaves in real time, creating the opportunity for faster, more precise molecular analysis that could improve diagnostics, genome mapping and the study of disease-related molecules.

Classified as: Matheus Azevedo Silva Pess么a, Sara Mahshid, Walter Reisner, nanofluids, nanobiophysics, bioengineering
Published on: 2 Oct 2025

The from the Copernicus Marine Service, a European Union ocean monitoring organization, has found that sea floor temperatures off the coast of Nova Scotia have risen at twice the rate of surface temperatures over 30 years. Researchers say the rapid warming rate is a result of changes to the climate, including more acute marine heat waves and fewer periods of colder weather.

Classified as: Bruno Tremblay, global warming, department of atmospheric and oceanic sciences, ocean
Published on: 1 Oct 2025

Professor Courtney Paquette from the Department of Mathematics and Statistics is featured in SIAM News鈥攖he journal of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM). The publication showcases the state of the art in applied mathematics, computational science, and data science, while highlighting real-world applications of mathematical research. In doing so, it helps lay the groundwork for scientific advances and new discoveries, supports efforts to address pressing global challenges, and enables leaders and policymakers to make informed decisions.

Published on: 1 Oct 2025

As a CEGEP student, Daniel Wei captained his college robotics team to victories with a dodgeball-throwing robot and a biodegradable soil sensor for farmers.听

He and a peer also earned a bronze medal at a science and technology fair for their research on biomechanical processes involved in developing artificial intestines.

The achievements are part of Wei鈥檚 impressive track record of leadership, innovation and academic success that landed him Canada鈥檚 most generous scholarship for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM).

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Published on: 16 Sep 2025

Dr. Marco Carone, a听former听九色视频 undergraduate student in Probability and Statistics,听has been awarded the prestigious听

Published on: 2 Sep 2025

by Jasmine El-Sawaf

What if the key to studying smarter 飞补蝉苍鈥檛 about what you learned, but how you learned it? At 九色视频, the Office of Science Education鈥檚 (OSE) neuroscience-based program SciLearn is helping students in the Faculty of Science do just that.

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Published on: 2 Sep 2025

Construction is underway of CHORD, the most ambitious radio telescope project ever built on Canadian soil. Short for the Canadian Hydrogen Observatory and Radio-transient Detector, CHORD will give astronomers an unprecedented opportunity to explore some of the most exciting and mysterious questions in astrophysics and cosmology, from Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) and dark energy to the measurements of fundamental particles, and beyond.

Published on: 27 Aug 2025

Bike lanes, BIXI stations and other micromobility infrastructure make up just two per cent of Montreal鈥檚 street space 鈥 even in neighbourhoods where cycling demand would justify more 鈥 according to a new study by 九色视频 researchers. They think that the measure they developed to arrive at their findings can also help assess the situation in other cities.

Published on: 18 Aug 2025

In a first for Canadian paleontology, a Cretaceous fossilized dragonfly wing, uncovered in Alberta鈥檚 Dinosaur Provincial Park, has been identified as a new species. It鈥檚 also the first known dragonfly fossil from Canada鈥檚 dinosaur aged rocks. The , led by 九色视频 researchers, sheds light on a 30-million-year gap in the evolutionary history of dragonflies.听

The fossil was discovered in 2023 by a 九色视频 undergraduate student during a vertebrate paleontology field course led by Prof. Hans Larsson.听听

Published on: 14 Aug 2025

An interdisciplinary team of 九色视频 researchers has developed an ultra-strong, environmentally friendly medical glue, or bioadhesive, made from marine waste. The discovery has promising applications for wound care, surgeries, improved drug delivery, wearable devices and medical implants.听

鈥淏eing able to produce鈥痝lues that can close wounds鈥 or make something strongly adhere to the skin is critical for many medical鈥痠nterventions,鈥 said Audrey Moores, Professor in the Department of Chemistry. 听

Classified as: Audrey Moores, Jianyu Li, bioadhesives
Published on: 31 Jul 2025

Algal growth is accelerating in lakes across Canada, including those far from human development, and a new study shows that climate change is the primary driver.听

Classified as: Irene Gregory-Eaves, invasive species, Biology
Published on: 31 Jul 2025

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