Fighting for Better Virus Detection
An electronic nose developed by Notre Dame researchers is helping sniff out bird flu biomarkers for faster detection and fewer sick birds. Read the story
An electronic nose developed by Notre Dame researchers is helping sniff out bird flu biomarkers for faster detection and fewer sick birds.
Latest Research
- Postdoc Appreciation Week: Meet three postdoctoral scholars driving research and innovation at Notre DameDuring Postdoc Appreciation Week, the Graduate School and Office of Postdoctoral Affairs celebrate our Notre Dame postdocs, their invaluable contributions, and the lasting impact they have on our drive to be a force for good in the world. To understand the full scope of the talented postdocs that Notre Dame has attracted and the research they are conducting, meet three of them.
- Notre Dame opens applications for 2026 Provost’s Postdoctoral Fellowship programThe University of Notre Dame is accepting applications for the next cohort of…
- Notre Dame’s seventh edition of Race to Revenue culminates in Demo Day, a celebration of student and alumni entrepreneurship…
- Managing director brings interdisciplinary background to Bioengineering & Life Sciences InitiativeThis story is part of a series of features highlighting the managing directors of the University's strategic initiatives. The managing directors are key (senior) staff members who work directly with the…
- Monsoon mechanics: civil engineers look for answers in the Bay of BengalOff the southwestern coast of India, a pool of unusually warm water forms, reaching 100 feet below the surface. Soon after, the air above begins to churn, triggering the summer monsoon season with its life-giving yet sometimes catastrophic rains. To better understand the link between the formation of the warm pool and the monsoon’s onset, five members of the University of Notre Dame’s Environmental Fluid Mechanics Laboratory set sail into the Bay of Bengal aboard the Thomas G. Thompson, a 274-foot vessel for oceanographic research.
- Exoneration Justice Clinic Victory: Jason Hubbell’s 1999 Murder Conviction Is VacatedThis past Friday, September 12, Bartholomew County Circuit Court Judge Kelly S. Benjamin entered an order vacating Exoneration Justice Clinic (EJC) client Jason Hubbell’s 1999 convictions for murder and criminal confinement based on the State of Indiana’s withholding of material exculpatory evidence implicating another man in the murder.