Aerial view of CU Boulder campus with engineering building

CU Engineering professor helps lead White House climate report

Nov. 26, 2018

A major climate change report released Friday by over a dozen U.S. federal agencies outlines the potential for significant economic and environmental damages in the coming years. The report included a chapter on the potential for impacts on roads, bridges and other infrastructure.

Cyber

It's Cyber Monday - are you ready?

Nov. 26, 2018

As you consider your strategies for finding the best Cyber Monday deals, remember that where there is connectivity, there is a need for security. That’s why CEAS, aka CU Engineering, is launching a new cybersecurity program.

A gripper created by Robotic Materials Inc., founded by the author, Nikolaus Correll, performs a manipulation task during the industrial assembly competition at the World Robot Summit in Tokyo.

Correll: Robots Getting a Grip on General Manipulation

Nov. 21, 2018

How a new generation of grippers with improved 3D perception and tactile sensing is learning to manipulate a wide variety of objects

Illustration of a light bulb in a thought bubble.

Dream Big: Submit Your Ideas for Increasing Diversity

Nov. 21, 2018

In 2018, our college announced a new strategic vision . One pillar of that vision includes getting more underrepresented groups engaged and excelling in STEM fields. So how do we do this? Well, we want your ideas . Reaching our goal of becoming the first public engineering college with a...

alumni raise hands to be recognized at celebration

Being BOLDer: The BOLD Center celebrates 10 years of supporting women and minorities in engineering

Nov. 16, 2018

The BOLD Center turns 10 years old and the College of Engineering and Applied Science celebrates nearly half a decade of supporting women and minorities in science, technology and engineering.

A blood bag being prepped for transfusion

$7 million interdisciplinary research project could revolutionize biomedical industry

Nov. 16, 2018

Researchers at CU Boulder are exploring a new form of biostasis that could entirely eliminate the need for cooling, potentially revolutionizing combat medicine, organ donation, vaccines and even the way we treat disease altogether.

Male grad student working in a lab

Yes we GAANN! CU Boulder goes 5 for 5 in national needs fellowships

Nov. 16, 2018

CU Boulder goes 5 for 5 in national needs fellowships to rack up 117 academic years of graduate student support. The College of Engineering and Applied Science received $4.7 million in October from the U.S. Department of Education to strengthen graduate teaching and research, as well as expand access to...

conniechilds.podcast1

"I'm A Better Engineer as a Woman." - Connie Childs

Nov. 15, 2018

On CUE sits down with Connie Childs. Connie is a fourth-year aerospace engineer studying at CU Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science. After years of contemplating life as a woman Connie began to transition from her assigned at birth male identity to the woman she is today. Today we'll...

Connor Brooks, a graduate student in computer science, demonstrates a robotic system that responds to spoken commands. (Credit: Glenn Asakawa/CU Boulder)

Robotic helping hand: A look inside the IRON Lab

Nov. 14, 2018

Dan Szafir and his colleagues belong to a rapidly-growing area of study called human-robot interaction. The field addresses the huge gulf that seems to exist between people and their robot helpers: Robots don’t always understand people, and people often don’t want to be around moving, learning machines.

The BREK team: Bob Erickson, Kala Majeti and Roger Bell

Electrical engineering startup awarded $250,000 grant to develop more efficient solar power technology

Nov. 13, 2018

Co-founded by Robert Erickson of electrical, computer and energy engineering and Kala Majeti of CU Boulder’s Technology Transfer Office, BREK will use the grant funds to develop the world’s first compact 250 kilowatt (kW) solar string inverter.

Pages