The interdisciplinary collaboration is aimed at integrating AI and LLM functionality into the UCSB BisQue Platform.
.
Multimodal and trilateral (from left): collaborators Tresa Pollock, B. S. Manjunath, and Beth Pruitt.
The interdisciplinary collaboration is aimed at integrating AI and LLM functionality into the UCSB BisQue Platform.
Early CAREER award winner Arpit Gupta; photograph by Lilli Walker.
Not all networks are created equal. Arpit Gupta would like to treat them as if they were.
Using photonics to generate efficient, robust, stable sources of entangled photon pairs.
In patients with Alzheimer's disease, tau proteins (shown in light blue) misfold and accumulate inside brain cells. By making a synthetic version of these proteins, researchers aim to better understand disease. Image by the National Institute on Aging
First synthetic ‘mini prion’ shows how protein misfolding multiplies, enabling study of fundamental interactions that underlie neurodegenerative disease.
The Digital Pottery Wheel (DPW, upper left) is a ceramic throwing wheel augmented with a clay 3D printing mechanism and a modular control platform. This mechanism-and-control approach allows the wheel to support standard manual ceramics throwing (upper right), autonomous 3D printing (lower left), and integration of manual manipulation and 3D printing in the same vessel (lower right).
Jennifer Jacobs is using her award to add control and flexibility to the burgeoning field of 3D printing.
Assistant professor Murphy Niu
The computer science assistant professor and physicist is pursuing her vision for a new quantum-computing paradigm.
Raspberry Pi fans (far left and right): Rich Wolski and Chandra Krintz with (from left) fourth-year PhD student Animesh Dangwal and undergraduate student researchers Emily Zheng, Karen Yuan, Shruthi Santhosh Unnithan, and Ria Sing. Photograph by James Badham
The world’s biggest assembly of Raspberry Pi computers comes to UCSB.
Katja Seltmann and Dan Oropeza are just two of the many researchers in multiple disciplines whose work will benefit from the new microCT instrument.
The new microCT machine fits right into the longstanding UCSB tradition of multidisciplinary sharing of important instruments.
Raspberry Pi fans (far left and right) Rich Wolski and Chandra Krintz with (from left) fourth-year PhD student Animesh Dangwal and undergraduate student researchers Emily Zheng, Karen Yuan, Shruthi Santhosh Unnithan, and Ria Sing. Photograph by James Badham
The world’s biggest assembly of Raspberry Pi computers comes to UCSB.
Fourth-year PhD student Lisa Mansson, who moves on to the UCSB finals after winning Round 3 of the 2025 UCSB Grad Slam.
Lisa Månsson wins Round 3 of UCSB Grad Slam for her talk about glioblastoma research.
Dan Blumenthal in his lab. Photograph by Matt Perko.
The Blumenthal lab continues to miniaturize powerful photonics technology for quantum use at the chip scale.
Concept illustration of nickel atoms placed on a silver catalyst for improved, safer, more environmentally friendly performance.
PhD student Anika Jalil overcomes a major challenge by placing the right number of nickel atoms in exactly the right place.