Virginia Tech Research magazine features preventing natural disasters, discovering how the sun works, designing modern kitchens

Virginia Tech physics faculty members Raju Raghavan, Bruce Vogelaar, and Jonathan Link are studying neutrinos to learn about the sun and the beginnings of the universe.

Virginia Tech physics faculty members Raju Raghavan, Bruce Vogelaar, and Jonathan Link are studying neutrinos to learn about the sun and the beginnings of the universe.

BLACKSBURG, Va., Feb. 14, 2008 – The winter 2008 issue of Virginia Tech Research magazine features eight research projects at the university, from the highly complex search for ways to prevent mosquitoes from transmitting disease to humans to a relatively straightforward evaluation of horses on 114 farms in Virginia, which revealed that 51 percent are overweight.

Mosquitoes have sheltered viruses and parasites for millions of years. Now scientists with the Vector-Borne Infectious Disease Research Group at Virginia Tech are discovering how the mosquito’s immune system works with the aim of helping mosquitoes rebuff invasion by viruses. Meanwhile, Christina George of Manassas, Va., a gutsy undergraduate, is helping establish a sustainable mosquito-borne virus surveillance center in Mali to determine the high-risk areas of mosquito-borne infections and provide enough data and information for the Mali people to apply for additional funding and support.

Just as with humans, obesity in horses results in a number of health problems. The culprit appears to be pastures – augmented for cattle – that are too rich for horses. Researchers in the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine and the Virginia Tech College of Agriculture and Life Sciences are now doing pasture and forage research, and developing exercise regimes.

In other research featured in the winter issue,

Virginia Tech Research magazine is available online. To request a print copy, e-mail Susan Trulove.