Eyring Science Center

The ESC houses the departments of Physics and Astronomy, Geology, and Food Science and Nutrition.

Research on plasma, atomic processes, lasers, high-pressure physics, nanotechnology, acoustics, and cold fusion have been conducted here.

[2] This 119-seat facility with a 39-foot (12 m) acoustically-treated dome was built in 2005 to replace the smaller, outdated Sarah Barrett Summerhays Planetarium.

However, since the building of the BYU Earth Science Museum, dinosaur displays are less common.

Media related to Carl F. Eyring Science Center at Wikimedia Commons