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  • Class of 2025 President’s Engagement, Innovation, and Sustainability Prize winners announced

    Four prize-winning teams will design and undertake post-graduation projects that make a positive, lasting difference in the world.

    4 min. read

    Top left: Team PIXEL: Ejun Mary Hong and Jack Roney; top right: The Nourish to Flourish team: Rashmi Acharya, Imani Nkrumah Ardayfio, and Inaya Zaman; bottom left: Sync Labs: Melanie Herbert, Nami Lindquist, and Alexandra Popescu; bottom right: Piotr Lazarek for Nirby.
    (Top left) Team PIXEL: Ejun Mary Hong and Jack Roney; (top right) The Nourish to Flourish team: Inaya Zaman, Rashmi Acharya, and Imani Nkrumah Ardayfio. (Bottom left) For Sync Labs, Melanie Herbert, Nami Lindquist, and Alexandra Popescu; (bottom right) Piotr Lazarek for Nirby.

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  • Nanoparticle blueprints reveal path to smarter medicines
    Hannah Yamagata, Research Assistant Professor Kushol Gupta and postdoctoral fellow Marshall Padilla, holding 3D-printed models of nanoparticles in a lab.

    (From left) Doctoral student Hannah Yamagata, research assistant professor Kushol Gupta, and postdoctoral fellow Marshall Padilla holding 3D-printed models of nanoparticles.

    (Image: Bella Ciervo)

    Nanoparticle blueprints reveal path to smarter medicines

    New research involving Penn Engineering shows detailed variation in lipid nanoparticle size, shape, and internal structure, and finds that such factors correlate with how well they deliver therapeutic cargo to a particular destination.

    Nov 12, 2025

    Monumental sculpture celebrated on Penn’s campus
    The Rui Rui sculpture on campus.

    nocred

    Monumental sculpture celebrated on Penn’s campus

    A generous gift from alumni Glenn and Amanda Fuhrman brings the work of internationally acclaimed artist Jaume Plensa to the University of Pennsylvania. The latest addition to the Penn Art Collection expands Philadelphia's public art.

    Nov 11, 2025

    A massive chunk of ice, a new laser, and new information on sea-level rise
    A researcher walking through a glacier in Greenland.

    nocred

    A massive chunk of ice, a new laser, and new information on sea-level rise

    For nearly a decade, Leigh Stearns and collaborators aimed a laser scanner system at Greenland’s Helheim Glacier. Their long-running survey reveals that Helheim’s massive calving events don’t behave the way scientists once thought, reframing how ice loss contributes to sea-level rise.

    Nov 4, 2025