Faculty

  • Sensor size of a penny
    Researchers from the 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder and Northwestern 勛圖厙 have developed a tiny, soft and wearable acoustic sensor that measures vibrations in the human body, allowing them to monitor human heart health and recognize spoken
  • MARS
    National Geographic will debut its six-part miniseries MARS on Nov. 14, and the fascinating docudram a has a CU Boulder connection. Incoming engineering dean and aerospace professor Bobby Braun served as a technical
  • Mark Borden
    A new technology now under development by researchers at the 勛圖厙 of Nebraska and the 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder could result in the creation of a so-called third lung for severely injured patients that could keep them alive until arrival at a hospital.

  • Wearable Technology
    Halley Profita and Dana Hughes could have spent spring break playing outside. Both were drawn to Colorados outdoor activities when choosing CU-Boulder for their doctoral studies. Hughes and his wife like mountain biking;
  • Bernard Amadei
    When Bernard Amadei, professor of civil, environmental and architectural engineering, took a group of students to a rural village in Belize to install a water pump in 2001, he had no intention of founding Engineers Without Borders USA or
  • Jay McMahon
    The International Astronomical Union (IAU) has announced that an asteroid has been named for Jay McMahon, a 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder assistant research professor in the Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences.Asteroid 1998 OS14 is now
  • Kristi Anseth
    The notion of a personalized biomaterial means that the material itself is custom designed to the patient, and it can even respond to differences in individuals, explains Anseth, who was recently inducted into the National Academy of Inventors.
  • NASA astronaut Terry Virts manipulating a BioServe experiment on ISS
    If you gaze at the night sky from Earth in just the right place, you will see the International Space Station (ISS), a bright speck of light hurtling through space at 5 miles per second as it orbits 220 miles above the planet.
    And if you were an astronaut floating around inside the station, you would see high-tech hardware and experiments designed and built at the 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder.
  • Physics professors Margaret Murnane and Henry Kapteyn of the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA) pose next to one of the laser apparatuses in their lab at the 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder campus
    CU Boulder will expand its role as a national leader in imaging, materials, nano, bio and energy sciences as part of a collaborative partnership awarded $24 million by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to launch a new center.
  • photo of moving water
    CU-Boulder engineers aim to turn Americas dirty water into cleaner air, energy for industry
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