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- CU 51传媒 researchers are gradually and safely returning to campus to continue their work in the lab. Read about Assistant Professor Nicole Labbe's return to research.
- A paper by Nina Vance discusses the importance of understanding exposure to particulate matter in residences and the health risks that result from exposure.
- McNeill, a mechanical engineering instructor in the program for the last eight years, will start the new position on July 1.
- Researchers found a new way of understanding the vaporization behavior of mixtures. The work is described in 鈥淰aporizable Endoskeletal Droplets via Tunable Interfacial Melting Transitions,鈥 a paper published in Science Advances this April.
- Artimus Robotics, a spinout company of CU 51传媒鈥檚 Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering, recently received $225,000 through the National Science Foundation鈥檚 Small Business Innovation Research Phase I program.
- Rising Engineering Plus senior Adrian Gutierrez successfully developed an automated bag valve mask, a device he hopes will help those with coronavirus in Mexico, his home for 18 years.
- Say hello to HAMR-Jr, the little robot鈥攊nspired by insects鈥攖hat can do incredible things. Its diameter is just about the size of a penny and it weighs far less than a paperclip.
- Professor Yifu Ding is starting a new research project that explores how soft robots of the future could include new materials inspired by snakeskin.
- Informed by the latest science, public health guidance and ideas from our campus community, CU 51传媒 is implementing a flexible, in-person fall 2020 experience designed to keep our community safe, ensure access and quality for our students, and move our community forward.
- For PhD student Brodie Hoyer, the opportunity to instruct and mentor cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point is well worth the rigor of getting his PhD in three years. Having attended West Point himself, he wanted to return to share with students what he has learned.