Riverside County, Calif., funds by National Science Foundation
Listing $7,820,871.00 in stimulus funds from National Science Foundation for Riverside
Note: For some programs where states do not report where money will be distributed across the state, we do not have the allocation for individual counties. Those programs include: Medicaid, unemployment benefits and food stamps. Those amounts are included in the totals for where the state agency receiving that money is located.
Amount refers to both the amount of stimulus funding going toward the project and the face value of the loan.
Recipient | Amount | Description | Federal Dept./Agency | Date |
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REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $1,000,000 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This proposal requests funds for the purchase of a new analytical X-ray photoelectron spectrometer (XPS) for the University of California, Riverside (UCR). This will be the first instrument of its type at UCR. The new XPS will be maintained and operated b | National Science Foundation | 4/15/2010 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $887,433 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support The UC Riverside Noyce Scholarship Program focuses on the University's internal partnership among the College of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, the Graduate School of Education and the ALPHA Center for Academic Partnerships with the rapidly growing, l | National Science Foundation | 6/01/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $610,000 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Positronium, with the chemical symbol Ps, is a very light form of hydrogen atom consisting only of an electron bound to an anti-electron or positron. Being composed of equal amounts of matter and antimatter, the Ps atom lives for only a fraction of a micr | National Science Foundation | 8/17/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $529,588 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Pathogens and hosts are engaged in an endless and deadly warfare. Type III secretion system (T3SS) and secreted effectors (T3SEs) are essential virulence factors of gram negative bacterial pathogens, some of which are responsible for the most devastating | National Science Foundation | 6/24/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $455,300 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This proposal centers on the development and application of novel set of multi-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance experiments for establishing through-bond connectivity and chemical shift assignments in disordered solids using scalar coupling-driven c | National Science Foundation | 7/10/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $400,000 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support The objective of this integrated research and educational program is to understand the mechanisms that form proteins in living tissues. This understanding is critical for inducing tissue growth for wound healing or disease recovery, and for other biomanuf | National Science Foundation | 7/06/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $400,000 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support TECHNICAL SUMMARY This CAREER award is funded by the Division of Materials Research and the Physics Division. It supports theoretical and computational research and education on quantum-many body systems with a focus on ultracold atom systems with connect | National Science Foundation | 7/07/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $399,695 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Instructors of undergraduate engineering courses have long been perplexed by the fact that students often struggle to solve problems that differ only superficially from ones they have already solved. For example, rotating the diagram for a statics problem | National Science Foundation | 7/07/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $380,627 |
Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support The ability of an animal to maneuver can determine its success at avoiding predators, catching food, and other fundamental behaviors that define the margin between life and death. Most biomechanical research has focused on the initiation or maintenance of
This spending item is part of a $391,627 allocation.
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National Science Foundation | 7/03/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $353,887 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This project aims to develop reliable and efficient tools for computing ligand-receptor association rate constants and elaborating non-covalent binding kinetics. The new methods will enable detailed simulation of molecular encounter pathways and will gain | National Science Foundation | 6/04/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $331,801 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Dr Wilson will study ten clusters of galaxies at redshift 0.87 < z < 1.34, which are seen as they were when the cosmos had expanded to only about half its present size. The clusters are chosen from a survey that combined 3.6-micron images from a 50-square | National Science Foundation | 8/14/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $314,730 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This project will research the thermal and thermoelectric properties of Graphene. | National Science Foundation | 6/18/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $259,544 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Multicore (also known as so-called chip-multiprocessors (CMP)) architectures are the trend for current and future microprocessor designs. They provide better performance via thread-level parallelism, better power/thermal scaling, and easy design by design | National Science Foundation | 8/03/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $249,670 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Biogeography is the study of the spatial distribution of species and ecosystems. While the biogeography of natural ecosystems is relatively well understood, we have a poor understanding of spatial patterns of plants in cities. Both the physical environmen | National Science Foundation | 8/12/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $229,309 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support The purchase of a high power, femtosecond laser system is proposed. This laser system will generate 2 millijoule, <150 femtosecond pulses at 800 nm with a repetition rate of 1 kHz. These pulses will be used to pump an optical parametric amplifier which, | National Science Foundation | 7/28/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $211,045 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Amines are volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emitted to the atmosphere from a number of sources including animal feeding operations. (AFOs) Significant literature evidence indicates that amines in the atmosphere act as precursors for fine particulate matt | National Science Foundation | 7/20/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $210,000 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support The objective of this research is to fill the technological 'gap' at the THz spectral region, by developing the first generation of THz graphene-based photodetectors with exceptional sensitivity, dynamic range, response rate and non-cryogenic operating te | National Science Foundation | 7/06/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $129,222 |
Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This project will research the industrial implementation of smart biopolymers for antibody purification.
This spending item is part of a $209,222 allocation.
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National Science Foundation | 8/17/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $119,736 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Advanced computing and data acquisition technologies have made possible the gathering of large multivariate data sets in many fields. Efficient multivariate statistical analysis tools for such data sets are highly sought after. Among the existing multivar | National Science Foundation | 7/04/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $112,955 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support The area of research of the present proposal is low dimensional topology. The problems discussed in this proposal find origin in the study of the connections between three-dimensional topology and symplectic topology of certain families of four-manifolds. | National Science Foundation | 9/14/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $104,500 | Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This project will undertake basic research aimed at controlling how electrical charge moves through photovoltaic devices. The objective is to produce synthetic electrets - non-conductive materials that are the electrostatic equivalent of magnets. Electret | National Science Foundation | 7/23/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $52,639 |
Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Dynamics of Gaseous Stars and Hydrodynamic Limits for Boltzmann Equations
This spending item is part of a $97,617 allocation.
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National Science Foundation | 6/30/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $50,717 |
Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Regulation of meristem function by AIL proteins Project Summary The aerial portion of a plant is derived from a small group of cells at the apex of the plant called the shoot apical meristem. The shoot apical meristem is responsible for continued organ in
This spending item is part of a $420,415 allocation.
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National Science Foundation | 6/24/2009 |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT RIVERSIDE | $28,473 |
Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This project has several goals. First, together with M. Batanin and D.Tamarkin, the P.I. is going to prove the Deligne conjecture for Hochschild chains. Second, together with D. Tamarkin and B. Tsygan, the P.I. is going to prove the formality of the opera
This spending item is part of a $110,000 allocation.
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National Science Foundation | 8/08/2009 |
ISCA TECHNOLOGIES, INC. | $0 |
Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This SBIR Phase II project will provide technology to perform remote nucleic acid testing (NAT) in any location. The combination of (a) our Probe-Target-Reporter (PTR) assay which allows the detection of unlabeled Target DNA, (b) our Parallume optical enc
This spending item is part of a $472,326 allocation.
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National Science Foundation | 8/12/2009 |