资讯

It's time again for your Columbia News Quiz. Test yourself with questions on Star Wars, Manhattanville Community Day, and the ...
Water and air pose completely different challenges to animals on a number of levels.
In Pronoun Trouble, the Columbia professor and New York Times columnist tells the truth about those pesky little words.
Columbia researchers, some sporting martian headbands, gathered to celebrate the launch of the new Vera Rubin Observatory.
A new book offers a framework for unifying the two spheres.
Humans have been wondering whether we are alone in the universe since antiquity. We know from the geological record that life started relatively quickly, as soon our planet's environment was stable ...
We have all experienced moments that we wish we could forget. However, research shows that humans often remember negative or traumatic experiences over positive ones. This persistent recall of ...
There’s a hot new BEC in town that has nothing to do with bacon, egg, and cheese. You won’t find it at your local bodega, but in the coldest place in New York: the lab of Columbia physicist Sebastian ...
The researchers’ highly detailed data also enabled them to track how ketamine affects dopamine networks across the brain. They found that ketamine reduced the density of dopamine axons, or nerve ...
In July of 1992, Columbia installed a bronze work called Life Force by the Boston sculptor David Bakalar, a physicist who worked in electronics before becoming a sculptor whose work focused on the ...
Astronomers, students, and space-loving New Yorkers gathered in Columbia’s Havemeyer Hall to view some of the highest-definition photos ever taken of the cosmos. The event—co-sponsored by Columbia, ...