Media Coverage

  • Interesting Engineering

    AI-system boosts microgrid efficiency for rapid power outage recovery

    Interesting Engineering reports on Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Yu Zhang's research on using AI to better manage islanded microgrids during power outages.  

  • Salon

    Why alien life could be thriving on the "terminator line" of exoplanets

    Even if exoplanets like those in this study have the conditions necessary to maintain water in some form once their solar systems have matured, M-dwarfs are 100 to 1,000 times more luminous when they’re young. And they can be temperamental, with lots of solar flares and ultraviolet radiation, said Jonathan Fortney, an astrophysicist at UC…

  • Newsweek

    Astronomers Detect Extremely Powerful Cosmic Ray of Mysterious Origin

    "The nature of the most powerful particle accelerators in the universe is a 60-year-old mystery," said Noemie Globus, one of the authors of the study, who is affiliated with the Institute of Physical and Chemical Research in Japan and the University of California, Santa Cruz.

  • Christian Science Monitor

    Sam Altman fired and now back: What CEO turmoil says about AI’s future

    The ongoing struggle between techno-optimism and doomerism gets exaggerated in every period of rapid technological change, says Benjamin Breen, a historian at the University of California, Santa Cruz and author of an upcoming book on utopian science in the mid-20th century. No one knows where AI will take humanity. If history is any guide, he…

  • BBC

    The genes that made us truly human may also make us ill

    "What's fascinating about the history of Notch2NL is that there actually was an original event that happened in our common ancestor with gorilla, where the original Notch2 gene was duplicated," says Sofie Salama, professor of molecular, cellular and developmental biology at the University of California Santa Cruz, who was involved in one of the research studies.

  • The Mercury News

    UC Santa Cruz researchers build AI to prevent drownings

    Professor of Computer Science Alex Pang's research on using AI to monitor beach conditions was featured in the Santa Cruz Sentinel and the Mercury News.  

  • NPR

    NPR Books We Love: We're Safe When We're Alone by Nghiem Tran

    NPR featured second-year Creative Writing/Critical Ph.D. candidate Nghiem Tran's novel We’re Safe When We’re Alone (Coffee House Books) in its 2023 "best of the year" list, describing this work of fiction as "hypnotic" and "richly allusive."

  • Grist

    The UAW ratifies a contract — and labor’s road ahead in the EV transition

    Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies Mijin Cha told Grist that labor organizing efforts within the renewable energy transition must not be framed as obstacles to progress on climate change. “The greed of the fossil fuel industry is what’s stopping the energy transition, not the fact that people want to make a decent wage,” she said.  

  • Financial Express

    India and the APEC

    Nirvikar Singh, distinguished professor of economics at UC Santa Cruz, argues in an op-ed that, if India can obtain an APEC membership, it would help improve flows of knowledge, capital, and goods within the region through better coordination of policies.

  • The Mercury News

    Predator protector

    Environmental Studies Professor Chris Wilmers was interviewed by The Mercury News for a story about mountain lion researchers. 

  • New Scientist

    Just leaving trees to grow could store a third of our carbon emissions

    Environmental Studies Professor Karen Holl urged caution in interpreting the findings of a new study by other researchers. Holl says the global analysis might miss complicated social and ecological dynamics that determine whether protection or restoration of forests is possible at a local level.

  • Los Angeles Times

    ‘We’re not going to quit’: Why a California community is boycotting carrots

    Professor Emeritus of Agroecology Steve Gliessman spoke with the Los Angeles Times about water management issues that have led to a boycott of carrots in the Cuyama Valley.

Last modified: May 14, 2025