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Special Reports

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Arecibo Observatory: Media Resources

Completed in 1963 and stewarded by U.S. National Science Foundation since the 1970s, Arecibo Observatory has contributed to many important scientific discoveries, including the demonstration of gravitational waves from a binary pulsar, the first discovery of an extrasolar planet, composition of the ionosphere, and the characterization of the properties and orbits of a number of potentially hazardous asteroids.

Date Updated: December 3, 2020

Announcements

NSF Announcements

Date Updated: October 29, 2020

Protecting Research and Facilitating Collaboration

NSF is committed to safeguarding the integrity and security of science while also keeping fundamental research open and collaborative

Date Updated: December 11, 2019

NSF Innovation Corps (I-Corps)

I-Corps offers researchers unique opportunities to learn how to turn discoveries into new technologies and to participate in the national innovation ecosystem.

Date Updated: November 2, 2020

NSF on coronavirus

NSF encourages you to take extra precautions to protect yourselves and your families against COVID-19.

Date Updated: August 3, 2020

Solar Science: Exploring the power of our closest star

NSF has been supporting solar astronomy and heliophysics since the 1950's, with its newest flagship observatory finishing construction in 2020, the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope.

Date Updated: January 29, 2020

Science Zone

Whether you're a teacher, student, or just fascinated by science, the NSF Science Zone app will ignite your imagination. Featuring hundreds of exciting videos and high-resolution photos from a dozen areas of science, you can spend hours absorbed in discoveries that take you from the depths of space, to the wonders of the unimaginably small, to the far corners of our own planet.

Date Updated: December 23, 2019

NSF Speakers Bureau

The NSF Speakers Bureau is a volunteer group of scientists, engineers and other professionals who represent the agency and are passionate about sharing information on NSF's mission, programs and the exciting breakthroughs that have come from NSF-funded research.

Date Updated: November 7, 2019

Brought to you by NSF

Every day you encounter something made possible by the National Science Foundation.

Date Updated: November 4, 2019

Science Nation

This Special Report has been archived and the entire series can now be found in the Multimedia Gallery.
An online magazine examining the breakthroughs and the possibilities for new discoveries about our planet, our universe and ourselves. Each week, Science Nation takes a dynamic, entertaining look at the research--and the researchers--that will change our lives.

Date Updated: October 21, 2019

NSF's 10 Big Ideas

Since 2017, NSF has been building a foundation for the Big Ideas through pioneering research and pilot activities. In 2019, NSF will invest $30 million in each Big Idea and continue to identify and support emerging opportunities for U.S. leadership in Big Ideas that serve the Nation's future.

Date Updated: October 19, 2019

Nobel Prizes--The NSF Connection

When a scientist who has received federal funding is awarded the Nobel prize, the public can share both the pride and the research benefits. More than 200 laureates have been supported by the public through NSF.

Date Updated: October 18, 2019

Exploring Black Holes

Black holes are extremely dense pockets of matter, objects of such incredible mass and miniscule volume that they drastically warp the fabric of space-time.

Date Updated: June 3, 2019

Penguins... And More!

The National Science Foundation manages the U.S. Antarctic Program, which coordinates all U.S. scientific research (including penguin research!) on the southernmost continent and in the Southern Ocean.

Date Updated: June 1, 2019

NSF Prize Competitions

NSF welcomes members of the public to help solve science, technology, engineering and math challenges by submitting ideas and solutions for a chance to win prizes.

Date Updated: May 30, 2019

Predicting Seasonal Weather

Large-scale weather patterns play a large role in controlling seasonal weather. Knowing the conditions of these atmospheric oscillations in advance would greatly improve long-range weather predictions.

Date Updated: October 18, 2018

Catch a Wave! The Science of Summer

Meet sharks and alligators up close, listen to the eerie sounds of the West’s rock arches, explore a lost continent. Catch a wave! Explore the science of summer with the National Science Foundation.

Date Updated: June 4, 2018

Futures of the Scientific Imagination

Fantastical thinking, grounded in real, NSF-funded science and engineering research, helps shape tomorrow's technologies. Imagination, science and technology together will inevitably change our lives.

Date Updated: November 21, 2017

LIGO: Einstein Was Right

A century ago, Albert Einstein predicted gravitational waves -- ripples in the fabric of space-time that result from the universe's most violent phenomena. A hundred years later, NSF-funded researchers using the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) have detected gravitational waves.

Date Updated: October 16, 2017

April Showers Bring... The Science of Spring

From flowers’ microscopic cells to thunderstorms called supercells, researchers funded by NSF are studying the science of spring. NSF peers into what makes spring such a vibrant--and sometimes dangerous--season.

Date Updated: April 18, 2017

Cleaner water, cleaner future: Engineering new water tech

Engineering researchers are creating new ways to handle drought, chemical spills and water purification. Imagine a clean water future.

Date Updated: February 13, 2017

Human Water Cycle

This Special Report has been archived and the entire series can now be found in the Multimedia Gallery.
NSF and NBC Learn, the educational arm of NBC News, release an original video series exploring the connection between water, food and energy.

Date Updated: February 7, 2017

Let It Snow! The Science of Winter

Snow--that icon of winter--blankets the land with a beautiful silence. We all depend on snow. Our year-round water supply largely comes from snowmelt, and many spring flowers need the nutrients in snow to bloom. Species as small as fungi and as large as moose require snow.

Date Updated: January 13, 2017

NSF INCLUDES

NSF INCLUDES is a multi-year initiative designed to help develop collaborative alliances and partnerships in order to create pathways for more people to become scientists and engineers.

Date Updated: December 13, 2016

Public Access to Results of NSF-funded Research

The National Science Foundation has developed a plan outlining a framework for activities to increase public access to scientific publications and digital scientific data resulting from research the foundation funds.

Date Updated: December 2, 2016

A Foundation for Robotics: Designing cooperative, intelligent systems of the future

Long-term federal investments in fundamental science and engineering research has led to novel machines that safely partner with people in nearly every environment.

Date Updated: June 6, 2016

NEON

The National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON) is an NSF-funded large facility project. NEON is a continental-scale research platform for discovering and understanding the impacts of climate change, land-use change and invasive species on ecology. Learn about NEON and NEON-related research.

Date Updated: March 23, 2016

Science of Innovation (2016)

From 3-D bioprinting that could one day generate heart tissue to origami-inspired structures built for medicine and space exploration, a new set of educational videos continues an exploration begun in 2013 inside the creative process that leads to innovation.

Date Updated: February 18, 2016

Computer Science Is for All Students

NSF-funded research is building the necessary foundations for implementing rigorous and engaging computer science education. A wide range of resources, including instructional materials and support for teachers and schools, have been prototyped across the U.S.

Date Updated: January 30, 2016

Nanotechnology: Super Small Science

A six-part video series howing how atoms and molecules that are thousands of times smaller than the width of a human hair can be used as building blocks to create future technology.

Date Updated: January 25, 2016
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