UW–Madison Science
@uwmadscience.bsky.social
📤 984
📥 351
📝 28
Science and research news from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
https://news.wisc.edu
Have you heard somewhere that people may soon live to be 150 years old? Well, big gains in life expectancy may instead be on the wane.
lafollette.wisc.edu/news/new-res...
loading . . .
New research reveals longevity gains slowing, life expectancy of 100 unlikely
A new study co-authored by a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor finds that life expectancy gains made by high-income countries in the first half of the 20th century have slowed significantly, a...
https://lafollette.wisc.edu/news/new-research-reveals-longevity-gains-slowing-life-expectancy-of-100-unlikely/
28 days ago
0
0
0
reposted by
UW–Madison Science
UW–Madison
about 2 months ago
When H5N1 avian influenza made a jump into dairy cattle in early 2024, the development prompted health and economic concerns. Since then, a team of researchers at UW–Madison has been working to answer important public health and food-safety questions:
news.wisc.edu/uw-madison-v...
loading . . .
UW–Madison virologists are at the forefront of efforts to keep tabs on avian influenza in dairy milk
When H5N1 avian influenza made a jump into dairy cattle in early 2024, the development prompted health and economic concerns. Since then, a team of researchers at UW–Madison has been working to answer
https://news.wisc.edu/uw-madison-virologists-are-at-the-forefront-of-efforts-to-keep-tabs-on-avian-influenza-in-dairy-milk/
0
7
1
reposted by
UW–Madison Science
WARF (Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation)
3 months ago
100 years ago, a @uwmadisoncals.bsky.social discovery sparked the founding of WARF. Today, that partnership continues to drive innovation. Here's to a century of impact and the future ahead! #WARF100
https://grow.cals.wisc.edu/departments/features/a-century-of-research-partnerships
0
3
1
reposted by
UW–Madison Science
UW–Madison
3 months ago
Ecological restoration at the UW–Madison Arboretum helps create and manage the land's healthy native plant communities, and volunteer work parties are a vital part of the ongoing work.
loading . . .
A different kind of work party: Practicing ecological restoration at UW Arboretum
Ecological restoration at the UW Arboretum helps create and manage the land's healthy native plant communities, and volunteer work parties are a vital part of the ongoing work.
https://news.wisc.edu/a-different-kind-of-work-party-practicing-ecological-restoration-at-uw-arboretum/
0
11
2
reposted by
UW–Madison Science
UW–Madison
3 months ago
James Dahlberg received the Bayh-Dole Coalition’s American Innovator Award for his commitment to advancing federally funded inventions from the laboratory to real-world applications, including bringing several types of health screenings to homes and hospitals everywhere.
loading . . .
UW professor emeritus who paved the way for at-home colon cancer testing and other screenings earns national recognition
Earlier this month, the Bayh-Dole Coalition awarded James Dahlberg the American Innovator Award, recognizing his commitment to advancing federally funded inventions from the laboratory to real-world a
https://news.wisc.edu/uw-professor-emeritus-who-paved-the-way-for-at-home-colon-cancer-testing-and-other-screenings-earns-national-recognition/
0
7
5
'Baby' stars are typically surrounded by disks loaded with gas, but it isn't long before that mass starts to drift away.
#UWMadison
astronomers say that might mean gas giants like Jupiter need to form earlier than rocky planets like ours.
news.wisc.edu/measuring-ga...
loading . . .
Measuring gases around young stars, astronomers unlock major clues to planet formation
UW–Madison astronomers and international collaborators have produced the most accurate measurement of the gases swirling around young stars and their changing mass over time. The discovery offers clue
https://news.wisc.edu/measuring-gases-around-young-stars-astronomers-unlock-major-clues-to-planet-formation/
4 months ago
0
6
2
For decades, we've known a handful of changes to an otherwise unremarkable stretch of our genes upped the risk of coronary artery disease. But it took
#UWMadison
stem cell scientists in
@valels.bsky.social
's lab to figure out why.
news.wisc.edu/uw-madison-r...
loading . . .
UW–Madison researchers find hidden genetic clues upping cardiovascular disease risk
Understanding how the change in the genome increases risk for CAD is a step toward potentially preventing its damaging effects and perhaps one day developing therapeutic strategies to block the risky
https://news.wisc.edu/uw-madison-researchers-find-hidden-genetic-clues-upping-cardiovascular-disease-risk/
4 months ago
0
4
0
Want a listen that will, as
@kacarlab.bsky.social
puts it, 'wire you up?' "I will never forget that: I can hold a pen. And I can write. So, now, what do you do with it? What is the biggest question you can ask? What is the most important thing you can do with you life?"
add a skeleton here at some point
4 months ago
0
6
2
reposted by
UW–Madison Science
Wisconsin Alzheimer's Disease Research Center
4 months ago
How much can family history impact one's Alzheimer's risk? Drs. Sterling Johnson and Jessica Langbaum join
#DementiaMatters
to discuss the latest research on family history and genetic risk factors, focusing on the APOE gene as a risk factor. Listen 🎧
go.wisc.edu/665xnq
0
6
3
reposted by
UW–Madison Science
UW–Madison
4 months ago
With proposed changes to NIH support, potentially life-saving research at UW–Madison would become slower and less ambitious. And the true cost would fall on those waiting for the next medical breakthrough, who would have to wait even longer.
loading . . .
The real costs of research funding cuts
UW–Madison could lose tens of millions of dollars in annual research support due to a proposed change in federal funding. But what’s really at stake? The university’s ability to advance life-saving re
https://news.wisc.edu/the-real-costs-of-research-funding-cuts/
0
40
21
Congratulations to UW chemistry professor Martin Zanni on election to the
@nasonline.org
! Zanni pioneered a technique called ultrafast two-dimensional spectroscopy and has received many honors for his research and teaching.
news.wisc.edu/uw-madison-c...
loading . . .
UW–Madison chemistry professor Martin Zanni elected to National Academy of Sciences
Only 120 American and 30 international scientists are elected to the academy each year for what the academy describes as their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research.
https://news.wisc.edu/uw-madison-chemistry-professor-martin-zanni-elected-to-national-academy-of-sciences/
5 months ago
0
9
0
reposted by
UW–Madison Science
Wisconsin Energy Institute
5 months ago
Scientists at UW-Madison have reprogrammed a microbe that eats toxins from broken down plant fiber while leaving the sugars untouched. A major step forward in biofuel production! Read more:
energy.wisc.edu/news/rewired...
#biofuels
#bioenergy
#uwmadison
#microbe
1
5
3
Before you leave campus for the summer (or for a brief post-commencement breather) enter your most remarkable, surprising and revealing science images in the 2025 Cool Science Image Contest.
news.wisc.edu/enter-your-a...
loading . . .
Enter your amazing science visuals in the 2025 Cool Science Image Contest
To celebrate the exploratory and aesthetic value of the photos, renderings, videos, images, art and more made in the process of fulfilling curiosity and advancing science, the 15th annual Cool Science
https://news.wisc.edu/enter-your-amazing-science-visuals-in-the-2025-cool-science-image-contest/
5 months ago
0
2
1
Join alum and Science Journalist in Residence
@alecluhn.bsky.social
, carbon removal researcher Rob Anex and Floodlight News editor Dee Hall for "Beyond 1.5°C: Covering Controversial Climate Solutions." Thursday, April 17. 4 p.m. Memorial Union.
news.wisc.edu/uw-grad-and-...
loading . . .
UW grad and international climate reporter returns to campus as spring Science Journalist in Residence
Now based in London, Alec Luhn has worked from Istanbul and Moscow to cover an array of environmental- and climate-related stories, including wildfires, droughts, earthquakes, melting glaciers and int...
https://news.wisc.edu/uw-grad-and-international-climate-reporter-returns-to-campus-as-spring-science-journalist-in-residence/
6 months ago
0
4
1
Ann Palmenberg was a trailblazer in virology and infectious disease research — but that was just for starters. A great scientist, mentor and friend, she lived every day to its fullest.
news.wisc.edu/remembering-...
loading . . .
Remembering Professor Emerit Ann Palmenberg, renowned leader in virology
Enthusiastic, jovial and persistent, Palmenberg rarely did anything halfway, at work or at home. She made it her mission to find ways to connect with everyone she met — and if that meant an opportunit...
https://news.wisc.edu/remembering-professor-emerit-ann-palmenberg-renowned-leader-in-virology/
7 months ago
1
15
8
No surprise UW–Madison's incoming dean of engineering works on supersonic flight and cutting-edge power cycles. He's all energy and can't wait to get up to speed.
news.wisc.edu/devesh-ranja...
loading . . .
Devesh Ranjan named dean of UW College of Engineering
Devesh Ranjan, a mechanical engineer and a leader at one of the country’s largest and highest-ranked engineering programs, will be the tenth dean of the College of Engineering at the University of Wis...
https://news.wisc.edu/devesh-ranjan-named-dean-of-uw-college-of-engineering/
7 months ago
0
7
1
Public mass shootings push alcohol sales upward for years in the surrounding community, though similar violence in private settings does not.
news.wisc.edu/communities-...
loading . . .
Communities that experience mass shootings drink more alcohol in the aftermath, a new study finds
The findings, published this week in the journal PNAS Nexus, add to the evidence that mass shootings have lasting effects on health that reach far beyond the lives of those directly involved.
https://news.wisc.edu/communities-that-experience-mass-shootings-drink-more-alcohol-in-the-aftermath-a-new-study-finds/
8 months ago
0
6
0
The 2024 WARF Innovation Awards go to early cancer detection and a process to break down "forever chemicals,"
#UWMadison
research developments with some great potential impact.
www.warf.org/news/2024-wa...
loading . . .
2024 WARF Innovation Award winners take on cancer detection, forever chemicals
A simplified cancer screening process and a new way to break down ‘forever chemicals’ have taken top honors from WARF.
https://www.warf.org/news/2024-warf-innovation-award-winners-take-on-cancer-detection-forever-chemicals/
10 months ago
1
11
2
reposted by
UW–Madison Science
Kyle Cranmer
10 months ago
Wow! UW–Madison is now 6th in national research ranking, surpasses $1.7 billion in research expenditures
news.wisc.edu/uw-madison-6...
loading . . .
UW–Madison 6th in national research ranking, surpasses $1.7 billion in research expenditures
UW moved up two spots in the ranking, and it had a 13.7% increase in research expenditures over the previous fiscal year, an increase of more than $208 million for the period covering July 2022 throug...
https://news.wisc.edu/uw-madison-6th-in-national-research-ranking-surpasses-1-7-billion-in-research-expenditures/
1
33
12
Creating bespoke tests to detect small molecules like opioids or environmental contaminants can be a long, expensive "bio-prospecting" slog ... until now?
@uwbiochem.bsky.social
researchers have sped up the process.
news.wisc.edu/new-tool-mak...
loading . . .
New tool makes quick health, environmental monitoring possible
Vatsan Raman, who has received a provisional patent for this work, sees broad applications for the technology his lab developed, including field tests that identify pollutants in local water sources i...
https://news.wisc.edu/new-tool-makes-quick-health-environmental-monitoring-possible/
10 months ago
0
5
1
OK, it was seconds. Hello,
@zacfreedman.bsky.social
, whose lab is moving cool soil microbe science by the ton.
add a skeleton here at some point
11 months ago
2
11
0
We are almost certainly just minutes away from stumbling upon our 100th faculty member On Here. Hello, UWMadSky.
11 months ago
0
19
4
Muscle cells grown from stem cells safely integrated into monkey hearts in a new study from
#UWMadison
and Mayo Clinic researchers — good news for kids with congenital defects at risk of heart failure and facing a shortage of donor organs.
news.wisc.edu/human-stem-c...
loading . . .
Human stem cell-derived heart cells are safe in monkeys, could treat congenital heart disease
Regenerating tissue to support healthy heart function could keep hearts beating stronger and longer, and this is where stem cell research is stepping in.
https://news.wisc.edu/human-stem-cell-derived-heart-cells-are-safe-in-monkeys-could-treat-congenital-heart-disease/
11 months ago
0
13
3
Love the tree silhouette aurora shot. This stunner is a winner from our 2024 Cool Science Image Contest shot by astronomy and physics undergrad Samuel L. Warfel.
news.wisc.edu/2024-winners...
add a skeleton here at some point
12 months ago
0
14
6
Pollution from the high-profile 2023 train derailment and fire in Ohio fell across 1.4 million square kilometers in 16 states, according to monitoring and analysis from the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene-based National Atmospheric Deposition Program.
www.slh.wisc.edu/new-nadp-fin...
loading . . .
New NADP Findings: East Palestine Train Derailment Caused Widespread Chemical Pollution | Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene
https://www.slh.wisc.edu/new-nadp-findings-east-palestine-train-derailment-caused-widespread-chemical-pollution/
over 1 year ago
0
3
3
Light from the bright disk around a black hole 10 billion light years away tells
@grieratron.bsky.social
's lab at
#UWMadison
that wind from the quasar is pushing gas out into its galaxy — giving the black hole a say in the creation of stars.
news.wisc.edu/wind-from-bl...
loading . . .
Wind from black holes may influence development of surrounding galaxies
The discovery helps illuminate the way active black holes can continuously shape their galaxies by spurring on or snuffing out the development of new stars.
https://news.wisc.edu/wind-from-black-holes-may-influence-development-of-surrounding-galaxies/
over 1 year ago
0
3
1
What's the deal with No Mow May? Maybe just a good opportunity to think about the many ways to make a lawn more pollinator-friendly.
hort.extension.wisc.edu/articles/wha...
loading . . .
<strong>What’s the deal with “No Mow May?”</strong>
Have you heard about “No Mow May?” Many people have committed to not mowing their yards in May, allowing flowering plants to grow to help provide food for pollinators. Before you stow away your mower ...
https://hort.extension.wisc.edu/articles/whats-the-deal-with-no-mow-may/
over 1 year ago
0
6
2
you reached the end!!
feeds!
log in