All News
- The unprecedented challenges of COVID-19 sparked an impressive and resilient response from seniors in their capstone design projects.
- In just one day, mechanical engineering alumna Suzi Jewett and her husband served 500 bowls of ramen and 1,200 gyoza to hospital staff. Two of their children, 10-year-old Sami and 12-year-old Jacob, helped cook and serve meals.
- In Colorado’s craft beer industry, precision is required and innovation is mandatory. CU Engineers bring both in spades. Meet a few of our local alumni brewers and learn how they’re engineering a better brew.
- Professor Shelly Miller discusses aerosols, tiny particles of liquid and material that float around in our environment. When they come from an infected person, they may be a significant source of coronavirus transmission.
- You are invited to our online projects showcase, celebrating the achievements of over 250 engineering capstone design students from April 27–May 1. Learn about their projects, leave a comment, and see how these talented engineers are already making an impact.
- Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations will cause urban and indoor levels of the gas to increase. This may significantly reduce our basic decision-making ability and complex strategic thinking, according to a new CU Boulder-led study.
- CU Boulder is one of several funded teams in the Subterranean Challenge, a competition launched by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to stimulate and test ideas around autonomous robot use in difficult underground environments.
- Postdoctoral Research Associate Kristine Fischenich tore her ACL three times as a young athlete. Now she works to characterize the soft tissues of the lower limbs to better understand injury and potential tissue-engineered replacements and therapies.
- Sixteen undergraduate and graduate students from the College of Engineering and Applied Science have earned prestigious Graduate Research Fellowships from the National Science Foundation including mechanical engineering's Ellen Rumley.
- Six NVC finalists, including Soulutions, a mechanical engineering senior design, left the event with at least $10,000 or more in their pockets. They were selected from a starting pool of 146 competitors, a record for the NVC.