Study Shows How Changing Climate Influences Tree Growth in Sierra Nevada
A new study by Cal State Fullerton geography researchers on how changing climate influences tree growth in the Sierra Nevada was published in The California Geographer.
A new study by Cal State Fullerton geography researchers on how changing climate influences tree growth in the Sierra Nevada was published in The California Geographer.
With the next-generation Cosmic Explorer observatory, Cal State Fullerton gravitational-wave scientists shift research focus toward future discoveries of the cosmos.
A new collaborative study, led by Cal State Fullerton postdoctoral scholar Shirel Kahane-Rapport, reveals that filter-feeding baleen whales ingest millions of pieces of microplastics — and consume more plastic than any other ocean organism.
Cal State Fullerton biology graduate student Katie Kern is studying chimaeras, a deep-sea fish that has no bones, but a skeleton made of cartilage and a forehead appendage with spiky teeth.
William Toledo joined Cal State Fullerton this fall as an assistant professor of secondary education. His research focuses on ensuring how student teachers can be comfortable being gay and lesbian teaching professionals and preparing future teachers to become LGBTQ+ advocates in schools.
Faculty, students, alumni and donors celebrate the 10-year anniversary of the Nicholas and Lee Begovich Center for Gravitational-Wave Physics and Astronomy (GWPAC). Alumni share how their curiosity about the cosmos led them to study gravitational-wave science at CSUF.
The SoCal Data Science Program, a collaboration between Cal State Fullerton, UC Irvine and Cypress College funded by the National Science Foundation, gives students a hands-on opportunity to learn all about this interdisciplinary, data-focused field.
Mechanical engineer John W. Sanders is using quantum gravity research to predict a phenomenon called “resonance” in structural engineering.
Trina Miller, a Cal State Fullerton undergraduate researcher, is studying the threats of human-created trash to marine life in the rocky intertidal zone.
CSUF geology students investigated an inactive volcanic magma chamber — once filled with molten rock and crystals — in the Sierra National Forest.