District Impact: 8th congressional district
Stories That Impact Congressional District 8
BAM Range Will Help ‘Bring Fear to Our Enemies’
Texas A&M is home to the Ballistic Aero-Optics and Materials (BAM) Range, the nation’s biggest and most advanced enclosed testing range for laser and hypersonic weapons innovation, including new types of materials that can withstand hypervelocity impacts. Sponsored by the U.S. Army, NASA, the State of Texas and The Texas A&M University System, the BAM Range will conduct national security experimental testing for government and industry partners as well as for space exploration and other types of advancements.
Read More About the BAM RangeSpinal Cord Injury Therapies for Veterans
Spinal cord injuries affect over 300,000 Americans, including veterans injured while serving our country, and athletes. Sponsored by the National Institutes of Health, researchers at Texas A&M are focused on developing new therapies that use cellular transplantation to regenerate new spinal cord tissue and restore arm, hand and leg movement after injury. This research also includes innovative methods to reduce pain and improve the quality of life for our veterans.
Read More About Therapies for VeteransAdvancing Tornado Recovery Timely Intelligence
Texas A&M researchers, with funding provided by the National Science Foundation, have developed a new method to create damage assessments and estimate recovery times following a tornado using artificial intelligence and restoration modeling. Once post-event images are available, the model can produce damage assessments and recovery forecasts in less than an hour. Researchers are working on using this model for other types of disasters, such as hurricanes and earthquakes.
Read More About Tornado RecoveryTexas Impact by the Numbers
Rising to Meet National Needs
With nearly 150 years of excellence, Texas A&M values its partnership with federal agencies to make ground-breaking research discoveries that fuel our nation's dominance across a range of critical fields. Below are just a few areas of impact.
National Security
From building the nation’s biggest and most advanced enclosed testing range for laser and hypersonic weapons and developing materials that can manage heat and scrub CO2 in circulated breathing apparatuses for warfighters, to pioneering self-healing materials and leading discoveries in nuclear science, Texas A&M's leadership in artificial intelligence, biosecurity, cybersecurity, chemistry and military science positions it as the ideal institution to advance national defense solutions.
Improving Health
At Texas A&M, health innovation starts with service — to rural families, to frontline workers, to veterans. Our scientists are creating a nasal spray that may delay Alzheimer’s disease progression by years, deploying an advanced vessel-chip to replicate real-life blood vessels to cure vascular disease, developing new cell therapies for spinal cord injuries in veterans and producing “goldilocks” radioisotopes to treat cancer without harmful radiation effects.
Food, Energy and Water Security
Whether through eradicating hard-to-treat crop diseases, utilizing artificial intelligence to produce damage and recovery assessments after tornados, forecasting ecological needs for wetlands to protect the ocean food web and human infrastructure during hurricanes, or developing an innovative and domestically sourced battery, Texas A&M is dedicated to meeting the challenges raised by global shifts in the risks associated with food, energy and water securities.
Space Exploration
By leveraging Texas A&M’s expertise and resources while bringing together stakeholders from civilian, commercial and defense, we remain a leader in space exploration. On earth we’re building robots and virtual assistants, making spacecraft reusable, pioneering aerospace medicine and leading a national consortium on in-space operations. We will also be the first university with private access to a flight facility on the International Space Station, conducting real research in space year-round.