“Is This Safe To Eat?” with Zoe Hunter
By Zoe Hunter
In case the cold weather kept you away from C2STs latest event entitled “Is This Safe to Eat?,” here is a quick recap.
This is the repository for all things C2ST. You can learn with videos of our past events, read articles concerning cutting-edge research and development in Chicago and elsewhere that will change our lives, check out C2ST in the news, and more! Use the Filter Media options below to browse C2ST’s content and discover something new!
We graciously thank The Brinson Foundation for their generous sponsorship of the C2ST Science Communication Internship in 2021-2024. As a result, an incredibly talented group of diverse STEM undergraduate and graduate scholars at area colleges and universities researched and developed over 100 blogs.* Enjoy-If you like, please share!
*As of 10.25.24
By Zoe Hunter
In case the cold weather kept you away from C2STs latest event entitled “Is This Safe to Eat?,” here is a quick recap.
By Elise Byun, Medill Reports
Originally published at: http://newsarchive.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/news-229592.html
By Dawn Turner Trice, Chicago Tribune
Dirk Morr came of age in Germany in the 1970s watching the television show “Star Trek,” which was dubbed in German. Imagine Capt. James Kirk’s often parodied, halting speech pattern delivered in a foreign language.
The show and its idea to boldly go “where no man has gone before” sparked in Morr a deep curiosity and love for science. Today, Morr, 47, is a professor of theoretical physics at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Continue reading “Trice: UIC professor sets phasers to fun in ‘Star Trek’ Q&A”
By Cheryl V. Jackson, Special to Blue Sky, Chicago Tribune
Originally published at: http://bluesky.chicagotribune.com/originals/chi-dirk-morr-star-trek-bsi-not-20140403,0,0.story
Communicator devices from “Star Trek”? We’ve already got ‘em in our cell phones.
But it probably won’t soon be possible to be beamed up by “Scotty” or anybody else, according to a physicist extolling the technological legacy of the science fiction franchise.
“Star Trek has fascinated us for the last 50 years,” University of Illinois at Chicago physics professor Dirk Morr said Wednesday during a Chicago Council on Science and Technology program at the university. It was part of a series of events surrounding Gov. Pat Quinn’s designation of Illinois Innovation Day Thursday.
Continue reading “How ‘Star Trek’ predicted the technological world we live in today”
By Kristen Thometz Producer, WTTW’s Chicago Tonight
Originally published at: https://chicagotonight.wttw.com/2014/04/01/real-physics-behind-star-trek
For the last 50 years, Star Trek has captivated audiences as the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise explored the galaxy using technological advances – warp drive, wormholes, beaming technology, holodecks – in order to do so. Dirk K. Morr, a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, joins us to discuss the scientific ideas behind Star Trek technologies. Morr will present his findings at 6:00 pm on Wednesday at the University of Illinois at Chicago in the Behavioral Science Building.