Faculty
- Honeybees play a scent-driven game of telephone to guide members of a colony back to their queen, according to a new study led by 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder.
- Electrifying the transportation sector is key to addressing air quality and climate challenges globally. However, building the infrastructure needed to make that shift will be a complicated process and one that is essential to get right the first time.
- New research from the Sprenger and Whitehead groups aims to identify and map common mutations in Spike proteinsthe proteins that allow the virus to enter and infect cells. This would provide researchers with a roadmap to anticipate and counteract the development of future SARS-CoV-2 strains with effective vaccines and vaccine boosters.
- Researchers at the 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder have won a $1.2 million award to establish a Center for Light Sheet Microscopy and Data Science, the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation has announced.
- CU Boulder researchers gave computer models of land surface different amounts of information on soil moisture and then evaluated how well irrigation can be predicted from them. Being able to do this on a large scale would be a useful step toward understanding how sensitive irrigation and evapotranspiration are to climate change.
- Associate Professor Shideh Dashti answered some questions on the anniversary of the disaster. Her team in the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering researches the influence of extreme events on interacting soil-foundation-structure systems and the resilience of urban infrastructure.
- Baker's research focuses on power systems, smart grid, renewable energy, building-to-grid optimization, and applications of machine learning in energy. Her project is titled Learning-Assisted Optimal Power Flow with Confidence.
- Researchers at the 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder are exploring how widespread use of electric vehicles in the future may impact vulnerable communities.
- Penina Axelrad has built her career pushing the boundaries of GPS technology.As a faculty member in the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences, she has earned accolades from her peers, served in leadership positions, taught
- A research team led by CU Boulder has designed a new kind of synthetic skin as slippery as the scales of a snake. The research, published recently in the American Chemical Society journal Applied Materials & Interfaces, addresses an under-appreciated problem in engineering: Friction.