UCSC in the News

January

  • January 20, 2025 - Bloomberg

    After the fire, should some parts of Los Angeles never rebuild?

    Miriam Greenberg, a professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, says a lot more research is needed before designing managed-retreat programs for wildfire-prone areas. But in some cases it’s much better for people to stay and rely on the knowledge of indigenous people who have kept fires away for centuries. “We need people who know how to steward those lands,” she said.
  • January 18, 2025 - The Guardian

    The perfect storm: why did LA’s wildfires explode out of control?

    Sociology Professor Miriam Greenberg explained the housing affordability pressures that are driving people to live in areas with rising fire risk as the climate changes. “Living in dense urban areas – which are safer in relation to fire and many other climate hazards – has become out of reach for many people, so they’re moving to areas that are ones they can afford,” she said. Even in the wake of a wildfire, Greenberg says some survivors who want to get out of a high-risk area cannot move to a safer area because the rents there are too high.

  • January 20, 2025 - The Mercury News

    ‘Rage-giving’ bolstered migrant nonprofits through Trump’s first term. How will they fare in the next?

    Research by UC Santa Cruz Associate Professor Juan Pedroza found that giving to immigrant-serving nonprofits increased markedly during the first Trump Administration. "It’s no secret that right out the gate, Trump went after immigrants, early and often and loudly,” said Pedroza. “It’s encouraging and impressive that all these different sources knew where to get the money to make a difference … Now, it’s newly relevant.”
  • January 16, 2025 - Santa Cruz Local

    As Los Angeles burns, Santa Cruz County officials urge wildfire prep — and not just in the mountains

    Santa Cruz Local shared information about an upcoming wildfire preparedness event co-hosted by UC Santa Cruz's Center for Critical Urban and Environmental Studies.
  • January 16, 2025 - CalMatters

    Why California keeps putting homes where fires burn

    Miriam Greenberg, an urban sociologist at UC Santa Cruz has argued that academics and policymakers need to see residential expansion into the state’s most fire-prone areas as yet another reflection of California’s affordability crisis. “People are looking to the (wildland-urban interface) as one of the only places that has capacity for housing,” she said. 

  • January 14, 2025 - ABC News

    Debunking 5 claims about the California wildfires

    Brent Haddad, a professor of environmental studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, corrected President-elect Trump's false claims about water for firefighting efforts in the Los Angeles area. "No water restoration declaration was put before Gov. Newsom," Hadded told ABC News in an email.
  • January 12, 2025 - Salon

    Why the legacy media suddenly sound like Bernie Sanders

    Nolan Higdon, a lecturer at Merrill College and the Education Department at the University of California, Santa Cruz, argues in this op-ed that the results of the 2024 election forced a reckoning in legacy media, where they had to confront the fact that they were wrong and Bernie Sanders was right, when it came to electoral politics.

  • January 13, 2025 - The Washington Post

    Cycling through Kansas, I've found people working across divisions

    Jenny Reardon, a professor of sociology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has spent a few weeks bicycling through her home state of Kansas every year since 2017. In this op-ed, she shares some of her observations and notes that Kansans are working on finding common ground.

  • January 09, 2025 - CNN

    Fact check: As wildfires rage, Trump lashes out with false claims about FEMA and California water policy

    Brent Haddad, an environmental studies professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, clarified that “there was never a ‘water restoration declaration’ in California that the Governor refused to sign,” and “there is no connection between environmental protection in northern California and low-flow fire hydrants in Pacific Palisades.” Haddad was also quoted on this topic in a wide range of local news outlets across the country.

  • January 10, 2025 - The iPaper

    Up to $150bn damage in LA fires unleashes wave of anger at cancelled insurance

    Galina Hale, a professor of economics at the University of California Santa Cruz, told The i Paper that insurance companies use models to determine what is termed “actuarily fair” insurance policy pricing. “Some areas have such high risks that insurance companies would have to charge insurance premia above what people might be willing to pay," she said. "These areas then lose insurance coverage altogether. In other areas, insurance companies have to increase their premia to reflect rising risks.”

  • January 08, 2025 - The Progressive

    How Venture Capital Flattens Neighborhoods

    Associate Teaching Professor of Community Studies Alison Alkon explained how gentrification tends to happen in phases, and the latest phase, funded by venture capital, has attempted to co-opt the aesthetic of the independent businesses that are often last hold-outs in the resistance against gentrification. “The force of this countermovement that was trying to make things kind of quirky and independent actually got absorbed into VC,” says Alkon, “like waves washing over cities across the world in a way that made them look more and more alike.”
  • January 05, 2025 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Listen to the visually impaired in the quest for better audio descriptions

    The Santa Cruz Sentinel covered Professor of Computational Media Sri Kurniawan's efforts to a work with the local blind and visually impaired community to identify useful features for new automatically generated audio description programs.
  • January 14, 2020 - The Guardian

    Americans are taught FDR was the hero of the Great Depression. For one historian, that’s erasure

    In The Guardian, journalist Lauren Aratani profiles UC SAnta Cruz Research Professor and Professor Emerita of History Dana Frank about her new book, What Can We Learn About The Great Depression: Stories of Ordinary People and Collective Action In Hard Times. 

     

  • January 13, 2025 - The Guardian

    Science has a trust problem. How to solve it? Don’t be condescending

    Local newspapers, television and radio stations are the most trusted media in the county, with 85% of Americans saying the local press is essential for democracy. It’s because these reporters are from the same communities they’re writing about, said Erika Hayden, director of the Science Communication Program at the University of California, Santa Cruz, enabling greater transparency and authenticity.

  • January 12, 2025 - San Francisco Chronicle

    Rising tides could wipe out Pacifica, but residents can’t agree on how to respond

    “We can’t build seawalls high enough to protect us forever,” said Gary Griggs, a professor of Earth and planetary sciences at UC Santa Cruz. “So, in the long run, it’s either going to be managed retreat or unmanaged retreat. It’s up to each community to decide.”

    Also interviewed on KCBS.

  • January 06, 2025 - Grist

    The business case for saving coral reefs

    “It’s kind of a selfish way to look at these ecosystems. We need to maintain them because they’re protecting people,” said Borja G. Reguero, a coastal engineer and professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz who’s co-authored much of the relevant science. Such logic is compelling to the emergency authorities and insurance companies that wind up “paying for the Katrinas and Sandys,” he added.
  • January 05, 2025 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Study focuses on effect of climate change on California's grasslands

    Several UC Santa Cruz researchers contributed to a recent study that combined long-term observational data with results from global change experiments in the region to show that, climate change is causing species that prefer hotter and drier conditions to become more dominant in regional grassland communities. "(We need to) understand what's happening so that we can guide our restoration and conservation efforts," said Environmental Studies Professor Karen Holl. Additional coverage in The Sacramento Bee.

  • January 05, 2025 - Rolling Stone

    China Is Ready to Take Advantage of Trump Trashing Clean Energy

    Environmental Studies Professor Sikina Jinnah discussed how backtracking on climate change affects America's standing with Europe and the rest of the world. “They’re probably thinking, ‘Oh god. Not again,’” she said. “[Trump’s win] signals to not only Europe but the rest of the world that we’re an unreliable partner in multilateral negotiations — not only in the climate context but much more broadly.”

  • January 01, 2025 - High Country News

    Wind energy jobs are taking off, but so are risks

    President-elect Trump has threatened to rescind all unspent IRA money, and the Treasury Department could reopen and rewrite the tax credit rules. Without federal funds and leadership, unionization rates in the wind industry will likely continue to vary across states. Going forward, Mijin Cha, who studies just transition at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said that new labor standards, as opposed to market incentives, would more effectively guarantee good jobs.

December

  • December 12, 2024 - CNN

    Humpback whale makes record journey from South America to Africa

    “Our dogmatic thinking is that (whales) always go to the place where they came from,” said Ari Friedlaender, professor of ocean sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was not involved in the study. “But there has to be some movement where you get some (animal) explorers that decide, for whatever reason, to follow a different path.”

  • December 30, 2024 - Smithsonian Magazine

    Hungry Sea Otters Are Taking a Bite Out of California's Invasive Crab Problem, New Study Finds

    “The otters are a just super voracious predator,” says study co-author Kerstin Wasson, an ecologist at the reserve and the University of California, Santa Cruz. “We calculated that the current otter population here eats somewhere between 50,000 and 120,000 green crabs a year.”

    Additional coverage in the Washington Post, USA Today, and other outlets.

  • December 26, 2024 - New York Times

    Raging Waves Batter California's Coast and Its Beloved Piers

    Michael W. Beck, the director of the Center for Coastal Climate Resilience at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said that big wave events have increased significantly over the past few decades. Daily exposure to stronger waves — which strike multiple times a minute — also causes wear that California’s sea structures weren’t designed to withstand, he said. “The waves have just been relentless on these piers,” Mr. Beck said.

    Additional coverage in SiliconValley.com, KQED, and the San Jose Mercury News.

  • December 18, 2024 - NPR

    You don't look a day over 4.35 billion! Here's the moon's anti-aging secret

    "We think that the Moon went through a period when it looked like Io, and for the same reason," says Francis Nimmo, a planetary scientist with the University of California, Santa Cruz, and lead author of the paper. "There would have been volcanoes jetting off all over the place," he says. "It would have been very dramatic." The result would be a Moon that seemed younger than its true age.

    Coverage of this news appeared in more than 1,000 other outlets, including an op-ed from Nimmo in The Conversation, and news coverage in El País, NBC News, Popular Science, Salon, Scientific American.

  • December 26, 2024 - San Francisco Chronicle

    Research by UC Santa Cruz professor, others yields gruesome discovery

    New research by an anthropology professor at UC Santa Cruz and other experts revealed a startling twist on the human sacrifice traditions of an ancient people of Peru.“Most of what we know about human sacrifices with the Moche relates to very public and gruesome forms of human sacrifice,” said Lars Fehren-Schmitz, an archaeogeneticist at UC Santa Cruz and author of the research. Additional coverage in Live Science.

  • December 23, 2024 - High Country News

    Utah’s coal mines can’t find enough workers

    Miners describe eroding benefits as unionized coal mines have closed down. Some former union mines may eventually reopen, but it will be with new names, new owners and no union contracts. Mijin Cha, a just transition researcher at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said that this is a common trend across the nation.

  • December 23, 2024 - Grist

    Three-quarters of the world’s land is drying out, ‘redefining life on Earth’

    Climate change has made great swaths of the planet drier and soils saltier, jeopardizing food production and water access for billions. We can look to current geopolitical and ecological events that are playing out currently to understand what we can expect in the future,” said Hannah Waterhouse, a soil and water scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. “Think of what is occurring in Sudan right now, where climate change is exacerbating resource scarcity, which is interacting in governance and geopolitics in violent outcomes for civilians.” Additional coverage in Clean Technica.

  • December 20, 2024 - Financial Express

    A haze of institutional weakness

    In an opinion article, Distinguished Professor of Economics Nirvikar Singh argues that the standard approach of localized and reactive policies will not India’s air pollution problems.
  • December 18, 2024 - San Francisco Chronicle

    Scientists are turning fog into water. Here’s what it could mean for California

    Peter Weiss, an environmental toxicologist at UC Santa Cruz, started collecting fog during the megadrought that plagued California from 2019 through 2021. “It’s bringing the concept of collecting atmospheric water in this passive way to our everyday lives,” Weiss said. “You can get a tangible quantity of water you can put to use that you wouldn’t otherwise have.”
  • December 13, 2024 - The Scientist

    A Tiny but Mighty Helper Stops Mosquito Viruses in Their Tracks

    Even though Wolbachia’s virus-blocking effects were described more than 10 years ago, the mechanisms behind it are still poorly understood, noted William Sullivan, a cell biologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who has delved into the biology of Wolbachia for more than two decades. “The million-dollar question is the mechanism of virus protection, and there are lots of models out there,” said Sullivan, who emphasized that more research efforts should be devoted to uncovering the basic molecular and cellular biology of Wolbachia interactions with their hosts.

  • December 18, 2024 - Cal Matters

    California’s attorney general leads a ‘know your rights’ workshop for immigrants

    California Attorney General Rob Bonta and other immigrant advocates have warned people to be careful about the legal help they seek and to only use qualified and licensed immigration attorneys. Scams offering fake immigration services or extorting payments by threatening deportation target vulnerable communities, especially in Los Angeles. Cal Matters shared research by UC Santa Cruz Associate Professor of Sociology Juan Pedroza that sheds light on these types of scams, which are likely vastly underreported.
  • December 13, 2024 - WDET

    Exploring gender roles in 2024, from ‘girlboss’ to ‘trad wife’

    UC Santa Cruz gender and sexual identity diversity expert Dr. Phillip Hammack joined Detroit Public Radio to discuss how gender roles have shifted in the past decade. Hammack said that new labels popularized on social media show that "ideas around how to be a woman, how to inhabit your gender, have now opened up, and there are options,” he said. “Those kinds of micro labels say, ‘You can inhabit your womanhood in different ways, and that’s okay.’”

  • December 16, 2024 - San Francisco Public Press

    Shuttered Radiation Lab Poses Ongoing Health Risks for Growing Neighborhood

    Coverage of the history of cleanup and development plans at the Navy's San Francisco lab cited research by Associate Professor of Sociology Lindsey Dillon and quoted Daniel Hirsch, the retired director of UCSC's former Program on Environmental and Nuclear Policy. Hirsch says there is “high likelihood that contamination migrated from the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard into the neighboring community.”

  • December 12, 2024 - San Francisco Public Press

    Destroyed Records, Dying Witnesses Obscure SF Radiation Lab

    “You almost have a sense of a military entity, knowing it was involved in rights violations and other questionable activities, burning the file before the incoming troops arrived,” said Daniel Hirsch, the retired director of the former Program on Environmental and Nuclear Policy at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who has authored several reports about shipyard and lab activities. Hirsch was also quoted in Part 4 and Part 6 of this series

  • December 12, 2024 - Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    Georgia prison system engages in deception as crisis builds

    A leading expert on prison conditions and solitary confinement, Craig Haney, was brought in to study the unit, and he described the SMU as "one of the harshest and most draconian" solitary confinement facilities he had ever seen. … "The atmosphere inside E Wing was bedlam-like, as chaotic and out of-control as any such unit I have seen in decades of conducting such evaluations," wrote Haney, a psychology professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

  • December 11, 2024 - KTVU

    Luigi Mangione: Societal support for alleged criminals isn't unprecedented

    "Sometimes communications online, particularly social media, can kind of give us an idea of where the public is at. And I don't think anybody can dismiss the fact that there are divergent opinions on this murder," said Nolan Higdon, a lecturer at the University of California, Santa Cruz. This story was picked up by Yahoo News.

  • December 18, 2024 - Lookout Santa Cruz

    Scotts Valley didn’t get a tornado warning, but San Francisco did. Why?

    Environmental Studies Professor Michael Loik explained how climate change could potentially lead to increased opportunities for tornado development. “From a mechanistic standpoint, if you warm up the atmosphere, you warm up the ocean, you create more evaporation, you create more storminess,” he said. “From a statistical standpoint, then that might lead some to predict more tornadoes but there’s so much more that goes into it than that.” 

  • January 01, 2020 - San Francisco Public Press

    Cold War Human Radiation Experiments Pushed Ethical Boundaries

    “This testing on people who were not genuine volunteers, who were not genuinely informed of the risk — they were human guinea pigs in an experiment that had no value at the end of the day,” said Daniel Hirsch, the retired director of the former Program on Environmental and Nuclear Policy at the University of California, Santa Cruz. “This is a real abuse of power.”

  • December 08, 2024 - Monterey County Herald

    Climate change swiftly remaking region’s grasslands

    Climate change is altering regional grasslands at remarkable speed as species that thrive in hotter, drier conditions dominate the ecosystem, scientists reported in a recent study. The researchers found this strong trend at test sites across California, with the most notable results near Elkhorn Slough, at UC Santa Cruz and in coastal Mendocino County. "I think what I was most surprised about was how consistent the results were across multiple sites," said study author Karen Holl, an ecologist from UC Santa Cruz whose lab provided the observational data for Monterey and Santa Cruz counties

  • December 06, 2024 - TODAY

    How to keep a dream journal — and why you should

    Thematic dream analysis can help you uncover the repetitive thoughts, emotions and behavioral patterns that could use some addressing. Thematic analysis as a dream method has been developed and refined by several researchers over time, including the prominent work of G. William Domhoff, a psychologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. 

  • December 06, 2024 - Politico

    The litmus test posed by ‘Lithium Valley’

    The jury is still out on whether lithium development at the Salton Sea will help the majority-Latino communities living in California’s second-poorest county. This is the topic of a new book from Chris Benner, sociologist and director of the Institute for Social Transformation at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and scholar-activist Manuel Pastor, director of the University of Southern California’s Equity Research Institute. Additional coverage in E&E News

  • December 04, 2024 - Vox

    Why thousands of people are traveling to one country to see these birds

    Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies Natalia Ocampo-Peñuela is a conservation ecologist who has been studying the explosion of bird-watching tourism in Colombia. Activity on eBird, a platform where birders can record their observations, increased more than 27-fold in Colombia since 2010, according to unpublished research by Ocampo-Peñuela and other authors that’s currently under review.

  • December 07, 2024 - Scientific Inquirer

    Mangroves save $855 billion in flood protection globally, new study shows

    Mangroves have been shown to provide $855 billion in flood protection services worldwide, according to a new study from the Center for Coastal Climate Resilience at UC Santa Cruz. The research, conducted by project co-lead, Pelayo Menendez and center director, Michael W. Beck, is featured in the World Bank’s 2024 edition of The Changing Wealth of Nations.

  • December 05, 2024 - LAist

    Tsunami reality check

    Although it’s unlikely, Steven Ward, a professor of earth and planetary sciences at UC Santa Cruz, has created a series of animations to show how a big tsunami might spread through San Francisco Bay. In Ward’s simulations, the incoming wave stands just over 16 feet tall.

  • December 05, 2024 - KTVU

    Tsunami warning along Northern California coast canceled, Bay Area residents react

    "It’s really a subtle effect between an earthquake that can cause a very large tsunami and one that doesn’t at all, and that has to do with what direction the fault moves. If it’s moving side to side it’s not very likely to push up a big pile of water and make a tsunami, but if the fault moves [up and down] then it does," said Emily Brodsky, Distinguished Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences at UC Santa Cruz, who added that she felt the tsunami warning was warranted. Also picked up by Yahoo.

  • December 04, 2024 - Yahoo Tech

    Scientists achieve major step forward in developing innovative diesel fuel alternative: 'This could really impact people'

    University of California, Santa Cruz, researchers say they have improved the waste oil-to-biodiesel production process with a simple, circular method involving mild heat. "I always wanted to work on biodiesel," said doctoral student Kevin Lofgren, the study's lead author. "I started exploring this new material that we made to see if it could attack the fats in oil to help catalyze biodiesel, and it all flowed from there."

  • December 03, 2024 - Tech Explorist

    Study confirms a 40-year-old quantum theory

    According to co-author Jairo Velasco, Jr., associate professor of physics at UC Santa Cruz, as electrons move from one point to another in a closed orbit, the property of the subatomic particle is better preserved. This could have wide applications in everyday electronics, demonstrating how data encoded in electrons’ properties could be transferred without loss.

  • December 02, 2024 - Forbes

    30 Under 30 - Healthcare (2025): Immergo Labs

    Adjunct Professor of Computational Media Aviv Elor and Electrical and Computer Engineering Ph.D. student Ash Robbins, who co-founded the telehealth physical therapy company Immergo Labs, were recognized in the 2025 Forbes 30 under 30 list in the Healthcare category.
  • December 02, 2024 - The Washington Post

    Enter the ‘ether,’ where scammers weaponize your emotions

    Anthony Pratkanis, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, co-wrote a source book for fraud fighters. “We’re looking at it from the outside, and we may not see all the little details and trappings that create that powerful situation for the targeted victim,” he said.

  • December 02, 2024 - Los Angeles Times

    Elevated radiation detected at former Bay Area landfill turned art park

    State-ordered environmental testing has uncovered elevated levels of cancer-causing radiation at the Albany Bulb, a former municipal landfill for construction debris that now features scenic hiking trails and a sprawling collection of outdoor art. The new testing adds to the serious public health and safety concerns for one of the Bay Area’s most cherished coastal spaces. Gamma radiation is particularly concerning as this high-frequency energy can move through solid objects and human tissue, damaging DNA molecules and raising a person’s risk for cancer, according to Daniel Hirsch, retired director of environmental and nuclear policy at UC Santa Cruz. “It’s like subatomic bullets being fired at the cells,” Hirsch said. “There is no safe level. Every level carries some risk.”

  • November 30, 2024 - Washington Post

    Animations of coiled hair for Black film characters improve with new algorithms

    The Washington Post highlights research from Professor A.M. Darke. Her recent work helped create programs for better animating coily hair. This work will help create better representation in animation.

November

  • November 25, 2024 - The Guardian

    Revealed: how a San Francisco navy lab became a hub for human radiation experiments

    The navy’s San Francisco lab was one of many research centers and hospitals across the country that exposed people to radiation and other hazards for scientific purposes. That makes it a demonstration of “the ways that people have been seen as disposable, to science or to the military”, said Lindsey Dillon, a UCSC assistant professor of sociology who is among a handful of academics familiar with the lab’s history. Daniel Hirsch, the retired director of UCSC's former Program on Environmental and Nuclear Policy, says the lab demonstrated a remarkable disregard for radiation’s hazards and a cavalier attitude toward human health, even by the permissive standards of the time. Originally published in the San Francisco Public Press, with an accompanying podcast
  • November 22, 2024 - Mongabay

    Huge deforested areas in the tropics could regenerate naturally, study finds

    Karen Holl, professor of environmental studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was not involved in the research, noted that it’s critical to include local communities in regeneration efforts. Holl’s own research in Costa Rica has shown that people often see natural forest regeneration as “messy,” and they tend to place more value on planted landscapes. What’s also important is how long these forests last once they’ve regrown, Holl said. “We sort of assume that the land is growing back, and the large-scale data suggests that it’s not as permanent as it seems,” she added. “The problem is that you can’t map people’s decision-making at large scales.”

  • November 20, 2024 - Los Angeles Times

    California's rainy season begins with a bomb cyclone bang. Are we in for a third record wet winter?

    “This is welcome to a certain extent, it moves us away from fire risk by wetting down ecosystems,” said Michael Loik, a professor of environmental studies at UC Santa Cruz. “On the other hand,” he added, “it can be too much of a good thing too quickly.”

  • November 15, 2024 - Financial Express

    India and the US elections

    Nirvikar Singh, distinguished professor of economics at UC Santa Cruz, argues in this op-ed that the importance of the recent U.S. elections for India cannot be overstated. The political landscape in the U.S. has shifted dramatically.

  • November 14, 2024 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    UC Santa Cruz awarded $4 million grant to address systemic racism, ableism in K-12 math

    The National Science Foundation awarded more than $4 million in grant funding to UC Santa Cruz to support a project aimed at addressing systemic racism and ableism in K-12 math education. “I really want teachers in mathematics education to have better ideas, resources and pedagogies to teach all of their students,” said assistant professor of elementary mathematics education and project lead Paulo Tan. “The big hope is that we can challenge the systemic barriers in math education in a meaningful way.”

  • November 14, 2024 - The Guardian

    Washington state farm workers worry about boom in legal foreign workers

    Rosa Navarro, a sociology doctoral student at the University of California, Santa Cruz, researches the guest worker program’s expansion in Washington state. Farm workers have told her that some farms replaced their entire workforce with guest workers, and advocates say that the H-2A program is making inroads with agricultural sites that haven’t used its workers before.

  • November 06, 2024 - Good Times

    The Hills are Alive: Concerned residents are saving wildlife from deadly crashes…and saving drivers

    Good Times covered research by Chris Wilmers through the Santa Cruz Puma project, particularly how findings from the project are informing efforts to protect pumas from traffic fatalities. Wilmers calls a new wildlife crossing tunnel on Laurel Curve “the best opportunity for maintaining puma connectivity across Highway 17 in Santa Cruz County.”
  • November 26, 2024 - Popular Science

    Great Red What? Check out Jupiter's giant, magnetic tornado

    Jupiter’s immense size–about 1,000 Earths could fit inside of it–and its swirling and jiggly Great Red Spot typically get most of the attention. Now, the planet’s northern and southern poles have entered the discussion. A team of astronomers that includes Xi Zhang, a professor of planetary sciences, have discovered equally large spots at both poles that appear and disappear seemingly at random. Additional coverage by Forbes, FuturismEarth.com, Space.comCosmos Magazine, and other news outlets.

  • November 25, 2024 - Oceanographic Magazine

    Whale-ship strikes reduced if 2.6% of ocean made safer

    “Trade-offs between industrial and conservation outcomes are not usually this optimal,” said co-author Heather Welch, a research scientist with the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration and the University of California, Santa Cruz. “Oftentimes, industrial activities must be greatly limited to achieve conservation goals, or vice versa. In this case, there is a potentially large conservation benefit to whales for not much cost to the shipping industry.” Additional coverage in the Conversation, Earth.com, Eco Magazine, the Guardian, and others.

  • November 22, 2024 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Stuck in the muck: Scientists study carbon trapped by Elkhorn Slough

    Scientists are measuring how much carbon dioxide Elkhorn Slough can suck from the atmosphere. Their research is funded by a $3.5 million grant awarded in 2022 by the University of California Office of the President. It is part of a broader effort to find ways to remove greenhouse gasses from the atmosphere. “Wetlands are one of the best natural systems to sequester CO2,” says Adina Paytan, a principal investigator at the UCSC Center for Coastal Climate Resilience. She is leading the study.

  • November 22, 2024 - CleanTechnica

    Earthquake And Remembrance: The Tsunami Of 2004

    Some of the answers could be forthcoming under a research project at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where professor Emily Brodsky is working on a $1.1 million Department of Energy grant aimed at studying the potential to induce earthquakes from different kinds of human activity including geothermal wells and groundwater management systems as well as fracking and carbon sequestration.

  • November 19, 2024 - Scientific American

    Should Offshore Oil Rigs Be Turned into Artificial Reefs?

    Mark Carr of the University of California, Santa Cruz, wrote that there are few natural rock reefs at the depths of the California oil platforms and none with comparable physical characteristics. If the goal is to contribute to overall reef area, their value is “minuscule.” If, however, the intent is to preserve their unique habitats, their value is “100 percent.”

  • November 13, 2024 - Smithsonian Magazine

    Voyager 2 Measured a Rare Anomaly When It Flew Past Uranus, Skewing Our Knowledge of the Planet for 40 Years, Study Suggests

    “The Uranus system is one of the big blank spots that are left on our map,” said Francis Nimmo, a planetary scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
  • November 22, 2024 - Artforum

    Dreams of Dakar

    Artforum, one of the world's leading art magazines, highlighed the work of UC Santa Cruz Humanities Professor Gina Athena Ulysse in its story about the prestigious Dakar Biennale (Dak'Art). A featured artist at the Biennale, Ulysse, a prolific Haitian-American scholar and artist, has a vibrant installation on the facade of the Ancien Palace de Justice, where the exhibition is being held in Senegal. 

  • November 20, 2024 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    UC Santa Cruz Theater Arts lives up to a smart adaptation of Nikolai Gogol’s ‘Inspector General’

    Professor and Chair of the Department of Performance, Play & Design Michael Chemers reimagined the classic Russian play Inspector General for a new era. Santa Cruz Sentinel writer Jake Thomas gives the play a stunning review, in large due to its "ability to inspire reflection." Inspector General will be playing until the end of this week, with its last show on November 23, 2024.
  • November 16, 2024 - Broadway World

    World Premiere of ‘Here Comes the Night’ to Open at Moving Arts Theatre

    UC Santa Cruz alumna Hailey McAfee, who graduated with a B.A. in Theater Arts, is currently directing a new play. Here Comes the Night is set to premiere in Los Angeles in January and run through mid-February.
  • November 14, 2024 - Allure

    We’re Much Closer to A Disney Princess With Type 4 Hair

    A.M. Darke, a UC Santa Cruz professor of Performance, Play, and Design, recently released a paper with a colleague from Yale focusing on their research in animating coily hair. Animation didn’t even include texture in Black hair until 2021 with Disney’s Encanto. Darke’s research is game changing in the field of animation and will lead to greater representation in film, video games, and more.
  • November 12, 2024 - San Francisco Chronicle

    A mysterious deep-sea creature appeared in Monterey Bay. Now scientists are finally telling the world

    In 2000, a team of scientists first laid eyes on what they would later call the Mystery Mollusk via a remotely operated vehicle at 8,576 feet. After 150 viewings, many rounds of measurements, some genetic studies and 24 years later, a scientific description of the animal with the scientific name Bathydevius caudactylus has been published. The description was co-written by Steven Haddock at the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at UC Santa Cruz.

  • November 12, 2024 - Modesto Bee

    S.F.’s Ocean Beach could be transformed with massive seawall. Surfers are not happy

    An upcoming scientific article about the impact of development on California beaches by geologist Gary Griggs of UC Santa Cruz and coastal engineer Bob Battalio called armoring and repeated beach nourishment solutions that are expensive and only "effective over a few decades at best."

  • November 11, 2024 - Australian Broadcasting Network

    Composing music with AI isn't new, but recent advances have serious implications for the music industry

    As AI quickly advances there are a lot of questions about its ethics. But whether it is good or bad there is no denying that AI plays a major role in the future of music making. One of the early pioneers of AI music was David Cope, a UC Santa Cruz professor emeritus of music. His work with computers starting in the 1980s laid the groundwork for the music we have today.
  • November 12, 2024 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    UC Santa Cruz’s ‘Inspector General’ updates classic political play

    The UC Santa Cruz Arts Division is premiering a new play this week. Inspector General, which is an adaption of a Russian play by the same name, raises a conversation around political corruption in the modern day. The Santa Cruz Sentinel spoke to Michael Chemers, the chair of the department of Performance, Play, and Design who wrote the play, to break down its importance in relation to contemporary politics.