Get those Spandex shorts and bike jerseys ready! For the third year in a row, riders in the Buffalo Bicycle Classic can choose to participate in support of College of Engineering and Applied Science students who demonstrate merit and strong financial need. The fundraising ride has provided nearly $4 million...
Alex Hirst saw his first tornado recently, followed quickly by his second, third, fourth and fifth. As an aerospace PhD student and Smead Scholar at the Â鶹ÊÓƵ, he played an active role in the 2019 TORUS project – which took a team of...
Fifty years ago today, the command module of the Apollo 11 spacecraft splashed down in the Pacific Ocean, safely returning the first astronauts to set foot on the moon. Now, students from Colorado and across the world will continue that legacy of exploration via the Great Lunar Expedition for Everyone...
The updated name, the Herbst Program for Engineering, Ethics and Society, highlights how Herbst courses prepare students for the social complexities of being human and of being engineers.
CU Boulder students were among only six universities invited to present an innovative network security concept in June as part of Starts H4D, a pitch competition for cutting-edge national security solutions.
CU Boulder is one of several funded teams in the Subterranean Challenge, a competition launched by DARPA to stimulate and test ideas around autonomous robot use in difficult underground environments. CU’s team is a $4.5 million collaboration led by the College of Engineering and Applied Science through the Autonomous Systems Interdisciplinary Research Theme.
Researchers in Assistant Professor Christoph Keplinger’s lab released a toolkit to show scientists, hobbyists and entrepreneurs how to create their own artificial muscles. They hope this will bring researchers one step closer to developing wearable, surgical and collaborative robots that safely and effectively help humans.