STEM

A group of people, some holding water sample collecting equipment, stand on the shoreline of a pond.

Science Meets Shoreline

In New Hampshire, the wellness of freshwater bodies is largely managed by watershed associations. While those associations are often rich with passion, where they come up short is in expertise. And that’s when they call UNH’s Lakes Lay Monitoring Program.  Read More

Recent Stories

  • Banafsheh Ferdousi
    - Stormy Weather
    Banafsheh Ferdousi, a research scientist in the UNH Space Science Center, has received $800,000 from NASA to study space weather that impacts our technology. Read More
  • Computer science faculty Mihaela Sabin and Karen Jin
    - Computing Professors Research Advantage of Oral Exams
    Computer science faculty Mihaela Sabin and Karen Jin will present their research at the 2021 Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education's Technical Symposium. Read More
  • Nada Al-Haddad
    - Brighter Days Ahead
    Nada Al-Haddad, a research assistant professor in the UNH Space Science Center, has been awarded a prestigious four-year, $690,000 NASA grant to support her solar-based research... Read More
  • Drone image of research tower in forest in autumn
    - Excellence in Citations
    Forty-one current and emeritus UNH researchers are among the world's 100,000 most cited, according to a new study. Read More
  • The Autonomous Surface Vehicle team stands next to a yellow vessel.
    - Seas the Day
    A team of UNH scientists won first place in an international competition for virtual autonomous ocean-going robotics. Read More
  • James Glennon '12, '20G, recent graduate of the cybersecurity policy and risk management program
    - Cybersecurity Spotlight: James Glennon '12, '20G
    James Glennon '12, '20G became interested in cybersecurity during his time as an undergraduate at UNH, where he studied business administration and IT. While working full-time at... Read More
  • Growing More Than Algae
    - Growing More Than Algae
    Fertilizer pollution can have ripple effects in the food webs of streams and rivers, new research from UNH and other institutions finds. Read More
  • Close-up of clams
    - Not Clamming Up
    A recent paper by a team of UNH researchers sheds new light on how apoptosis, a form of programmed cell death, evolved in invertebrates. Read More
  • New_Dean_Cyndee_Gruden
    - Cyndee Gruden named dean of the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences
    Following an extensive national search, UNH will welcome Cyndee Gruden as dean of the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, effective Jan. 11. Read More
  • Physics professor Chanda Prescod-Weinstein stands against a chalkboard with arms crossed.
    - A Force in Physics
    Nature magazine has selected assistant professor of physics Chanda Prescod-Weinstein to its "Nature's 10" list of 10 people who helped shape science in 2020. Read More