For media inquiries, visit the Office of Media Relations website or call 702-895-3102.

Las Vegas Weekly

For 44 years, before it was imploded to make way for the Venetian, the Sands ruled the Strip. From 1952 to 1996, the glamorous casino was at the center of Las Vegas’ constant evolution, hosting the likes of John F. Kennedy and the Rat Pack. In his new book, At the Sands: The Casino That Shaped Classic Las Vegas, Brought the Rat Pack Together, and Went Out With a Bang, Las Vegas historian David G. Schwartz chronicles the days of the illustrious resort.

Las Vegas Weekly

For 44 years, before it was imploded to make way for the Venetian, the Sands ruled the Strip. From 1952 to 1996, the glamorous casino was at the center of Las Vegas’ constant evolution, hosting the likes of John F. Kennedy and the Rat Pack. In his new book, At the Sands: The Casino That Shaped Classic Las Vegas, Brought the Rat Pack Together, and Went Out With a Bang, Las Vegas historian David G. Schwartz chronicles the days of the illustrious resort.

Futurity

Developing materials that are superconducting—without electrical resistance and expulsion of magnetic field at room temperature—is the “holy grail” of condensed matter physics, says Ranga Dias, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering and of physics and astronomy at the University of Rochester.

Book Club Chicago

As Chicago weighs a school reopening plan for the year’s second quarter, one thing is conspicuously absent: an agreement with the city’s restive and powerful teachers union.

Wired

After years and years of work, we are finally here. A team of researchers from the University of Rochester in New York has just synthesized the first superconducting material , a mix of hydrogen, carbon and sulfur, which manages to show its special characteristics even at room temperature . A tool, therefore, that could revolutionize the world of technology and electronics, with significant benefits both in terms of costs and environmental. “Sought after for more than a century,” comments study author Ranga Dias , “these materials are sure to change the world as we know it. Our discovery will open the door to many potential applications ” . The studyhas just been published in Nature.

BBC News Mundo

A superconducting material allows electrical current to flow through it with perfect efficiency, without wasting energy.

The New York Times

For decades, physicists have dreamed of discovering a material that could effortlessly convey electricity at everyday temperatures, a feat that would save gargantuan amounts of energy and revolutionize modern technology.

Vice

For the first time ever, scientists have demonstrated that superconductivity, a state that enables electrical charges to pass through materials with no resistance, is possible at room temperature.

Sci News

First discovered in 1911, superconductivity gives materials two key properties. Electrical resistance vanishes. And any semblance of a magnetic field is expelled, due to a phenomenon called the Meissner effect.

You Might Also Like

Josh Hawkins, UNLV
Campus News |
News highlights featuring UNLV students and staff who made (refreshing) waves in the headlines.
students in spring
Campus News |
News highlights starring UNLV students and faculty who made local and national headlines.
Spring Flowers (Becca Schwartz)
Campus News |
A roundup of the top news stories featuring UNLV students and faculty.