As 2024 comes to a close, University of Florida students, faculty, and staff are looking back on an amazing year. Forbes recognized UF as a “New Ivy," the university reached new heights with the launch of the UF Astraeus Space Institute, and a historic partnership was formed with UF Health providing care to Team USA in the 2024 Paris Olympic Games. Those of us in the UF newsroom wanted to revisit our favorite stories from the last 12 months. Here are our top 10.
UF scientist Rob Ferl completes historic space mission
In August, UF scientist Rob Ferl took a giant leap for research when he became the first NASA-funded university researcher to conduct his own experiments in space during a flawless sub-orbital mission on Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket.
Read moreUF experts weigh in on Olympics economy and tourism
The 2024 Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games took place from July 26 to Aug. 11 and was the largest event ever organized in France, according to the International Olympic Committee. UF faculty shared expertise and context on how this global event affected the economy and tourism of an Olympics host city.
Read moreGene therapy restores vision in first-ever trial for rare, inherited blindness
A gene therapy developed by UF scientists restored useful vision to patients with a rare, inherited blindness. The results were so dramatic that one patient saw her first star and another saw snowflakes for the first time.
Read moreEngineering students solve soldiers’ problem at lightning speed
What started as a class project for UF engineering students became a viable solution for soldiers who needed an easier, faster, and safer way to camouflage their vehicles on the battlefield. Students in a mechanical engineering capstone course received real-world training to design and produce a vehicle camouflage deployer for the U.S. Army.
Read moreWe date, marry people who are attractive as we are, new analysis finds
In good news for our egos, both men and women were pretty accurate at rating their own physical attractiveness, according to a new study. Couples also tended to be well-matched in their attractiveness, suggesting that we largely date and marry people in our own “league,” at least as far as beauty is concerned.
Read moreWasting away again in Gainesville? New Jimmy Buffett course comes to UF
It’s always 5 o’clock in UF’s Jimmy Buffett course, (Un)Common Arts: “Son of a Son of a Sailor,” even though it starts at 5:10 p.m. The fall launch of the new one-credit honors elective came at a fitting time, considering Aug. 30 was Jimmy Buffett Day and Sept. 1 marked the one-year anniversary of the singer-songwriter’s death.
Read moreScientists CT scanned thousands of natural history specimens now available for free access
The openVertebrate project was a five-year initiative funded by the National Science Foundation to make 3D models of museum specimens freely available to scientists, students, teachers, and the public. The project members took CT scans of more than 13,000 specimens, with representative species across the vertebrate tree of life.
Read moreListen carefully: UF study could lead to better deepfake detection
UF researchers recently concluded the largest study on audio deepfakes to date and found humans had a 73% accuracy rate but were often fooled by details generated by machines, like British accents and background noises. Want to test your ability to detect deepfakes? Click on the article to take the quiz.
Read moreFueled by determination, UF alum survives 30 hours on a Colorado mountain
Freezing rain poured down on Steve Stephanides as he narrowly faced death on Colorado’s 14,231-foot Mount Shavano. The 47-year-old UF graduate had gone on a company-led charity hike with his co-workers. After reaching the summit, Stephanides prepared to head down the peak. The next several hours would test his faith and his fortitude.
Read moreQuincy Jones mastered the art of arrangement
UF professor and Latin GRAMMY-winning musician José Valentino Ruiz reflected on the career and legacy of Quincy Jones, who died on Nov. 3, 2024 at the age of 91. Jones transformed our understanding of musical arrangement, which is the art of deciding how a song unfolds.
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