CyLab’s Aayush Jain and Aditi Raghunathan are two of five Carnegie Mellon University recipients of the 2026 Sloan Research Fellowship, one of the most prestigious awards available to early career scholars.
MSE’s Noa Marom has been elected as a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS), which recognizes excellence in physics and exceptional service to the community.
MSE’s Noa Marom has been named a recipient of the American Chemical Society’s OpenEye Outstanding Junior Faculty Award. The competitive award is designed to recognize the work of rising faculty members and assist them in gaining visibility within the computational chemistry and modeling community.
Carnegie Mellon University’s Secure Blockchain Initiative (SBI) has announced its third round of funded proposals, providing $130K to six groundbreaking research projects that are exploring the security and privacy of distributed ledger technology.
MSE’s Noa Marom used machine learning to identify potential semiconductor materials.
Four Ph.D. students in the College of Engineering have received funding to pursue research on valuable, relatively unexplored topics.
A team CMU students combined quantum mechanical simulations, optimization algorithms, and machine learning to perform Crystal Structure Prediction (CSP).
This year, CyLab has awarded $450K in seed funding to 20 faculty, staff, and students in five departments across three colleges at CMU.
The African Engineering and Technology Network, led by CMU-Africa, awarded six planning grants to research collaborations that will lead to socio-economic impact and focus on driving inclusive digital growth on the continent.
MSE’s Noa Marom was mentioned by Science Daily about her research on topology for quantum computing.
MSE’s Noa Marom was featured in Technology Networks about solar cell research.
