Beth Potier
Beth Potier's Articles
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Engaging With Industry
For their senior capstone project, five UNH undergraduates developed a new cleaning robot for Massachusetts company Symbotic. -
Revelle Lecture
Professor of history Jeffrey Bolster was selected by the National Academy of Sciences to deliver its prestigious Revelle Commemorative Lecture. -
SMSOE Participates in Consortium on Research Vessels
The University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School of Oceanography has created a consortium with two major institutions -
Computing on the Head of a Pin
Physics professor Jiadong Zang has discovered a materials combination that could lead to tiny computers. -
Undergraduate Inquiry
Students present their original research, scholarly activity and creative works at the Undergraduate Research ConferenceĚý April 17 – 28, 2018. -
Rising Tides, Increasing Floods
New research from UNH finds that so-called "nuisance flooding" along coastal roads has increased 90 percent in the past 20 years. -
Washboard Landscape
Newly discoveredĚý Seacoast-area ridges may hold clues about ice age, climate change. -
Fellow in Physics
UNH professor of physics Benjamin Chandran was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society. -
New Research Aims To Help Humans Survive Dehydration
A major NIH grant will help professor Matt MacManes understand dehydration by studying a tiny desert rodent. -
Next in XPRIZE
A UNH-led team has qualified for the final round of the Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE. -
Fulbright Scholar
Postdoc Kerri Seger listens to whales in Colombia. -
Keeping Great Bay Great
Across the disciplines and decades, UNH research has helped understand and improve this valuable resource. -
Warming Earth, Shrinking Mammals
A graduate student's findings from 50 million years ago give insight into future impacts of climate change. -
The Innovators
Fostering a culture of entrepreneurship and contributing to economic development, UNHInnovation has been making waves. -
Better (Space) Weather Forecasts
State-of-the-art space weather instruments developed by UNH researchers are heading into space. -
Tracking Moose
Pete Pekins is leading a study on the dwindling moose populationĚýand the rise of the winter tick. -
White Gold
Elizabeth Burakowski has co-authored a study from the organization Protect Our Winters. -
National Academy Honor
Larry MayerĚýhas been elected to theĚýNational Academy of Engineering. -
Here Come the Sea Squirts!
Warmer ocean temperatures will accelerate the reproduction in invasive tunicates. -
Stronger Storms Hamper Rivers' Clean-Up Powers
New UNH research aims to improve health of Great Bay Estuary. -
Getting to the Root of the Matter
Study by graduate student finds roots comprise almost a third of total tree biomass. -
Eruption Clues
UNH researchers create a snapshot of volcano plumbing. -
Tracking a Population in Peril
For the past four years, UNH professorĚýPete Pekins has been tracking the decline of New Hampshire’s moose population at the hands of the winter tick. -
Road Scholars
Researchers find rising seas could cause flooded roads in unexpected places on New Hampshire’s Seacoast. -
Researching Healthy Lakes
UNH researchers will examineĚýhow lake water quality in the Northeast’s temperate forests changed over the past three decades. -
Grad Honors
A UNH doctoral student hasĚýreceived AASHE'sĚýCampus Sustainability Research Award. -
Innovator Winner
Brian Calder has beenĚýnamed Innovator of the Year. -
Warming Soils, Warming Earth
In Science paper, UNH researchers describe a new feedback loop that could accelerate global warming. -
Communications Breakdown?
Nathan Schwadron explores the effects of radiation from solar winds on Earth. -
Woodland Woes
New England has been losing forestland to development at a rate of 65 acres per day, according to report co-authored by John Aber. -
Advancing Manufacturing
With new NSF grant, UNH will address New Hampshire's workforce needs. -
Academic Consequences
New UNH research has found that campus sexual violence significantly affects academics. -
Tracking a Troubled Icon
The iconic moose is in decline. Here's what UNH researchers are doing about it.Ěý -
Win(d)-Win Proposition
Nike’s “Breaking2” running project tapped UNH’s Flow Physics Facility. -
Cell Sorter
Need your cells sorted? TheĚýUniversity Instrumentation Center’sĚýnew sorting flow cytometer can help. -
Northwest Passage
For two days in March, UNH will be the epicenter for discussions about how New England will respond to changes in the Arctic. -
Prize on the Bottom of the Sea
A team of UNH-trained hydrographers are in the running for theĚý$7 million Shell Ocean Discovery XPRIZE.Ěý -
UNH Grad Is Point Person on Eclipse Comms
C. Alex Young '01G is talking about the eclipse. A lot.Ěý -
Smart Ash
New UNH research will help scientists measure, and thus predict the movement of, tiny particles like ash from volcanic eruptions. -
Sibling Studies
Corinna Jenkins Tucker aims to understand the role of conflict in sibling relationships. -
Good Listener
Jennifer Miksis-Olds has made a career out of listening to some of the Earth’s most curious creatures. -
CoRE Strength
“Universities have departments but the world has problems,” goes the old adage. UNH’s new annual Collaborative Research Excellence (CoRE) initiative, supported by the Office of the Provost and the... -
Griffin Wins Patriots Community Award
Louise Griffin was honored at Gillette Stadium recentlyĚýfor her leadership of the Zack’s Team Foundation, which addresses the issue of substance abuse. -
On High with Scott Ollinger
Scott Ollinger, professor of ecosystem ecology, understands our changing climate by studying the forests AND the trees.Ěý Ěý -
Meghan Howey Digs Durham
On the edge of Great Bay, Meghan Howey, associate professor of anthropology, digs for clues to New Hampshire's early — and violent — past. Ěý -
Road Scholars
Rising groundwater can flood roads up to two miles from the ocean, new research from UNH has found. -
Rising Star
Michael Thompson received the Rising Star of Excellence award at a conference in Denver recently.Ěý -
Birdbrained
At their core, the findings of recent research led by Matt MacManes seem obvious: Males and females are different. Yet the work disrupts a long-held gender bias within experimental science.