Ice Content / Ice Content for ٺƵ en What Happens If We Force Foreign Students Out of the Country? /curiosity-gap/what-happens-if-we-force-foreign-students-out-country <p>&nbsp;</p> <h2 class="heading--underline"><strong>U.S. Education 'Very Valuable Service Export'</strong></h2> <p>Professor Giovanni Peri, professor of economics and head of the ٺƵ Global Migration Center, released a <a href="https://globalmigration.ucdavis.edu/devastating-economic-consequences-pushing-foreign-students-out-country">policy paper</a> July 13&nbsp;detailing the economic and education consequences of forcing foreign students out of the country.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> July 13, 2020 - 2:57pm Karen Michele Nikos /curiosity-gap/what-happens-if-we-force-foreign-students-out-country How Fast Are Ice Shelves Really Melting? /climate/news/how-fast-are-ice-shelves-really-melting <p>A small group of scientists and doctoral students from the University of California, Davis, recently returned from Antarctica, where they became the first group to collect turbulence measurements from an underwater glider beneath an ice shelf.&nbsp;</p> <p>This multinational collaboration being led by the Korea Polar Research Institute, or KOPRI,&nbsp;was only the second time a glider has been successfully deployed underneath an ice shelf.</p> February 22, 2019 - 12:55pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/how-fast-are-ice-shelves-really-melting Beneath the Ice in Antarctica /news/beneath-ice-antarctica <p><strong>Update Aug. 14: </strong><a href="http://www.kcra.com/article/underwater-robot-could-hold-the-answer-to-climate-change-in-lake-tahoe/11662898">Watch KCRA-TV's coverage of Alex Forrest as he deploys underwater glider for climate change research in Lake Tahoe.</a></p> <p>•••</p> <p>To outer space and the deep ocean, add “beneath the ice” to the list of rarely charted frontiers of science exploration.</p> May 08, 2017 - 10:40am Katherine E Kerlin /news/beneath-ice-antarctica Melting Sea Ice May Be Speeding Nature’s Clock in the Arctic /news/melting-sea-ice-may-be-speeding-natures-clock-arctic <p>Spring is coming sooner to some plant species in the low Arctic of Greenland, while other species are delaying their emergence amid warming winters. The changes are associated with diminishing sea ice cover, according to <a href="http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/12/12/20160332">a study published in the journal <em>Biology Letters</em></a>&nbsp;and led by the University of California, Davis.</p> February 23, 2017 - 4:15pm Katherine E Kerlin /news/melting-sea-ice-may-be-speeding-natures-clock-arctic Ice Surface Melts One Step at a Time /news/ice-surface-melts-one-step-time <p>For a solid, ice is slippery stuff, even well below its freezing point. Victorian scientist Michael Faraday discovered over 150 years ago that ice is coated with a thin layer of liquid, which both makes ice slippery and contributes to chemical reactions at the surface. Now, researchers in Germany, the U.S. and Japan have used a combination of experiments and computer modeling to show how this “quasi-liquid layer” forms as layers of the ice crystal melt.</p> December 14, 2016 - 9:45am Andy Fell /news/ice-surface-melts-one-step-time