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Army veteran honored by National Science Foundation

January 26, 2021
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first_imgThe National Science Foundation (NSF) recognized 11 United States military veterans for their contributions to the science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields in Washington D.C., on Nov. 5. United States Army veteran and Notre Dame physics graduate student Luis Morales and 10 others were honored with NSF-funded Graduate Research Fellowships.“The ceremony in Washington was a Veteran’s Day event,” Morales said. “The NSF has never done anything like this before. They honored the veterans while also showing how they had contributed to—and made the transition from—the military to the STEM fields.”Morales said his trip to D.C. included a tour of the NSF headquarters and a poster session to present and discuss his personal research. The NSF expressed interest in helping veterans overcome any obstacles that may prevent them from pursuing a civilian career in STEM, Morales said.“Throughout the day, we [talked] about the relationship between veterans and the sciences,” he said. “We’re not traditional students. Many of us start schooling with families. It can be a struggle to manage this financially and time wise.”Morales said that he and the other NSF Fellows honored in D.C. were asked what could be done for veterans to help with the transition from the military to undergraduate or graduate education.“I wasn’t in a science field when I was in the military,” Morales said. “I just had this drive to do it. I followed my heart. I took all the opportunities that were given to me.”According to a press release from the College of Science, “the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship program provides three years of support for the graduate education of students who have demonstrated the potential for significant achievements in science and engineering research.”After more than five years of service in the Army, Morales moved to Elkhart, Indiana to pursue an undergraduate degree in physics and applied mathematics at Indiana University – South Bend in 2011. There, Morales collaborated with a group in the Nuclear Science Lab at Notre Dame to design a new detection system for the St. GEORGE Recoil Separator (Strong Gradient Electro-magnet Online Recoil separator for capture Gamma ray Experiments).“During my time as an undergrad, I spent about three summers on the St. GEORGE,” Morales said. “We ended up simulating and designing a new detection system, constructing this system and testing it to make sure it worked properly.”Morales said the coming stages of his research will work with the St. GEORGE accelerator to test chemical reactions and elements in stars.“We want to study the sun,” Morales said. “This system will help us study particular reactions in the sun. Right now, I’m working on putting all of the different parts of the system together and making sure they work right.”Morales said the financial support the NSF offers helps veterans integrate in civilian life on many levels.“The event in Washington was a pleasant experience overall,” Morales said. “It made me happy to see the NSF trying to reach out to veterans and relate to our struggles. It made me feel like they were genuinely interested in helping future veterans with interests in science pursue them.”Tags: National Science Foundation, NSF, Physics, St. GEORGE Recoil Separator, STEM, Veterans Daylast_img read more

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Watermelon wilt

January 17, 2021
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first_imgBy Brad HaireUniversity of GeorgiaGeorgia farmers mostly grow seedless watermelons now because folks don’t like to spit seeds anymore. But this has allowed an old, deadly plant disease to make a comeback, says a University of Georgia specialist. “I think watermelon growers are unfortunately planting themselves into a corner,” says David Langston, a plant pathologist with the UGA College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.The problem is a fungal disease commonly called fusarium wilt that can live in the soil for years, he said. It’s now popping up more frequently in Georgia watermelon fields, attacking the vascular systems of infected melon vines, choking off water and nutrients and eventually killing the plants.Some growers have had to destroy entire fields due to the disease, he said. “Once a melon gets fusarium wilt it can’t be cured.”The first documented case of fusarium wilt in watermelons was in Georgia around the turn of the 20th century. Over the years, the industry developed varieties with resistance to the disease, he said. But all of these varieties have seeds. The disease could still cause isolated problems and was a threat, but it was controllable.But watermelon eaters now demand melons without seeds. Seedless watermelon varieties have been around for many years, but over the past five years they’ve become the most widely grown melon type in Georgia and in other watermelon-growing states like Florida and Texas.But along with the increase of seedless watermelon growing has come an increase in fusarium wilt, he said.”We’ve seen a considerable increase in calls and plant samples that have been diagnosed as fusarium wilt,” Langston said. “They come in every day, several times a day. It is always the same story, only seedless are affected.”Every watermelon-growing county in Georgia has had reports of the disease in seedless melons, he said. Most Georgia melons are grown in the south-central part of the state.”Growers should be very concerned if they want to grow seedless melons in the future,” he said. “We haven’t seen any widespread significant yield losses yet. But we will, as long as we continue to grow seedless melons with no resistance.”A few seedless watermelon varieties have resistance to the disease. But they aren’t popular to grow, he said.Growers could lower their risk for the disease by planting a field in watermelons only every eight years. But growers, due to limited land, usually plant watermelons back to back each year in the same fields. Or they skip only one year.This compounds the problem, Langston said, because fusarium wilt can live and build up in fields that are planted in watermelons each year.There is an alternative. In Japan and in some European countries where land is limited, watermelons are grafted onto squash, pumpkin and gourd vines which are resistant to fusarium wilt. But the process is labor-intensive and costly for farmers. It costs consumers, too. One watermelon in Japan can cost as much as $25.Georgia growers will soon start harvesting the first of this year’s crop. Most Georgia melons are grown to target that quintessential watermelon-eating holiday: the Fourth of July.Despite the looming threat of this disease, Georgia’s watermelon crop is expected to be a good one this year. A dry spring could hurt overall yields, Langston said, but it has kept other diseases like gummy stem blight and downy mildew to a minimum.Georgia is a close second to Florida in overall watermelon production, growing about 25,000 to 26,000 acres annually.last_img read more

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