Researchers have received $12.9 million from the DOD for a project with potential to vastly improve the way diseases are monitored.

A Texas A&M engineering professor is leading a team of researchers in developing a living microbial coating.

Registration for the regional conference at Texas A&M University ends in early November; no walk-ins will be admitted.

The robots designed by a Texas A&M team can self-sufficiently travel through urban military environments.

The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) grant was awarded to a Texas A&M-led team that will develop a way to quickly detect which bacterial pathogens are present in a soil or water sample.