Summer in 91直播 Means Research
August 20, 2013
James Helmsworth
Rising third-year William Burke makes adjustments to instruments in Matthew Elrod鈥檚 lab. Elrod is currently studying the way chemicals react in the atmosphere, which may lead to new EPA regulations.
Photo credit: Zach Christy
91直播鈥檚 campus may appear tranquil in the summer, but inside its academic buildings students are hard at work. This summer, more than 90 students are on campus, working with faculty on scientific research. Though this occurs outside 91直播鈥檚 normal , it can be a critical part of a science education. Chemistry professor describes it as 鈥渢he most intense kind of teaching鈥 due to the amount of attention students receive from professors during this time. Over the summer, students also have more time to put professors鈥 guidance to use, as opposed with the research that occurs during the year.
This summer, not only are students learning how to work in a lab, but they鈥檙e also learning another important aspect of the field: how to report on their findings, with departments gathering every week for student presentations. In September, posters displaying the findings of all student and faculty summer research will on be display in the Perlik Commons.
The Air We Breathe
by a $355,000 (NSF) grant he received last year, Professor Elrod is researching the effects of chemical compounds produced by humans on compounds that occur naturally in the air.
Each of Elrod鈥檚 students is testing a different set of chemical reactions. One of them, rising junior William Burke, is examining the chemicals created when NO2, which is produced by such things as car engines and power plants, reacts with the hydrocarbons in the atmosphere. Much of what he does is determine the quantities of the different compounds the reaction creates. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 prevent all things, so we might as well prevent the worst things,鈥 says Burke. 鈥淲e鈥檙e finding out what is the worst thing.鈥
Eventually, Elrod鈥檚 research will result in atmospheric models that the will use to create policy and make predictions. When this happens, it will be thanks to, in part, the efforts of students like Burke.
鈥淚 focus everything I鈥檝e got on their training and development scientists,鈥 says Elrod.
The Water We Drink
Most people don鈥檛 get excited about the thought of drinking water purified with cow hair. Most people aren鈥檛 working in 鈥檚 lab this summer.
In Belitsky鈥檚 lab, rising sophomores Edmund Korley, Sophie Lewandowski, and Eric Bell are researching the ability of melanin, the pigment that gives human skin and hair its color, to bind metals to itself. Their research could be developed to create both a melanin-based method of measuring water鈥檚 acidity, similar to pH strips, and a water purification system comprised solely of hair soaked in a strong base.
According to Korley, a chemistry and Africana studies major from Newark, New Jersey, their research could provide access to clean drinking water worldwide. 鈥淚f you can get past the idea of drinking water washed with somebody else鈥檚 hair, it makes innovative technology, using melanin in cow hair, dog hair鈥攚aste hair, basically鈥攖o purify water,鈥 he says. This technology is certainly necessary. According to a by the World Health Organization and UNICEF, a 10th of the world uses unsafe water.
Professor Belitsky says that Korley, Lewandowski, and Bell have been valuable to his research. 鈥淭hey have contributed many good ideas to the project,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey have been great to work with and are quite productive. In fact, when I spent a week away from lab at a conference, they were twice as productive without me around!"
How Plants Eat
鈥淲hen we are hungry, we go to the garden or the kitchen and get something to eat,鈥 but plants, explains , associate professor of biology, cannot do this. 鈥淚nstead, they adjust the number of lateral or branch roots that they form.鈥
The former type of root growth, lateral root formation, comprises much of Laskowski鈥檚 research. This summer, she鈥檚 joined in her lab by rising senior Ari Schwartz and May 2013 graduate Seth Greenbaum.
The pair is studying the roles different plant hormones,and root curvature play in dictating where lateral roots grow. They have spent much of the summer crossbreeding mutated plants that are missing certain hormones with plants engineered to turn blue where lateral roots will form.
According to Greenbaum and Schwartz, research like this could be used to refine the methods used to grow such vegetables as broccoli and kale, which are part of the same family as the mustard plants they are studying. 鈥淯nderstanding the way plants grow and the way plants take in nutrients helps people understand how they thrive in their soil,鈥 says Schwartz. 鈥淟earning how lateral roots are developed means that you can change and develop how plants grow.鈥
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