Stories

Hazards Lurk in Fresh-Scented Cleaning Products

Hazards Lurk in Fresh-Scented Cleaning Products

Mopping produces pollutants similar to vehicle emissions

The fresh-scented products used to clean our homes and offices come with risks to our respira-tory health. The chemicals used to create scents such as lemon and pine pollute indoor air with nano-sized particles in similar ways that motor emissions affect the air we breathe outdoors, according to a new study published in the journal Science Advances.

Ruling the Web

Ruling the Web

Mediavine co-founders credit collaboration and transparency for company’s rise to internet giant.

When Matt Richenthal ’02 resigned from his role as a writer for a Boston start-up to launch his own content company called iScribe — “a terrible, awful name” — in 2004, he had no idea the business would one day grow into Mediavine, one of “The 20 Internet Giants That Rule the Web” as declared by Visual Capitalist in January. He only knew he wanted Steve Marsi ’01 along for the ride. 

Road to the Future

Road to the Future

Could Hydrogen Hold the Solution to Sustainable Jet Fuel?

As more countries around the world commit to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, industry groups are following suit. Among them, the members of the International Air Transport Association who announced a commitment to take action to cut emissions among global airlines in October.

Revolutionizing Patient Care

Revolutionizing Patient Care

Caesars Entertainment Equine Specialty Hospital Second Facility in the Country to Install Large Gantry CT Machine

The Caesars Entertainment Equine Specialty Hospital, a satellite facility of the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine, is among the first veterinary hospitals in the nation to install a specialized large gantry helical CT scanning machine. The device, manufactured by Qalibra, is adapted to the anatomy and behavior of equine patients and provides more advanced diagnostic capabilities for medical staff treating equine athletes by covering more anatomy with greater accuracy.

Next Level Surveying

Next Level Surveying

Mighty backpack captures millions of topographical data points in minutes

Surveyors have been measuring and documenting the topography of the Earth for thousands of years. Though the instruments have evolved from the early days of rope stretchers to modern total stations, it’s been challenging to collect accurate data efficiently when surveying heavily wooded areas, until now. A team of Purdue researchers is revolutionizing traditional ground surveying methods with a new technology that maps millions of elevation points in mere minutes simply by walking around the area wearing a backpack.

Race to Net-Zero

Race to Net-Zero

Could Hydrogen Hold the Solution to Sustainable Jet Fuel?

As more countries around the world commit to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, industry groups are following suit. Among them, the members of the International Air Transport Association who announced a commitment to take action to cut emissions among global airlines in October.

Destination Mars

Destination Mars

NASA-funded project aims to develop guidance system for manned mission to the Red Planet

After the Perseverance rover successfully touched down on Mars in February 2021 following a landing sequence scientists refer to as “seven minutes of terror,” the NASA mission was widely celebrated. It wasn’t just that Perseverance is the largest, most advanced rover NASA has ever sent to another world. It’s that landing on Mars is extremely difficult.

The Dawn of Personal Aircraft

The Dawn of Personal Aircraft

Computational prototyping of rotor blades speeds design of more agile, efficient ‘flying cars’

Flying cars have long been popularized as the transportation mode of the future. Thanks to technology licensed in part through Purdue University, the future of flying cars may be closer than we think.