Faculty News
A gift of $2 million from the Mortenson family caps an impressive year of growth for the Mortenson Center in Global Engineering, including new federal and nonprofit funding totaling more than $11 million and significant research findings.
Shelly Miller has spent years studying the airborne transmission of diseases. This summer, shes worked closely with campus facilities teams to ensure that students, faculty and staff can breathe the safest possible air.
The novel coronavirus may be able to travel from person to person through tiny particles floating in the air, according to a recent letter signed by 239 scientists from across the globe.
The international team, which includes six faculty members from CU Boulder, lays out evidence showing just how tenacious the pathogen behind COVID-19 can be: the virus, the group says, can likely drift through and survive in the air, especially in crowded, indoor spaces with poor ventilation like many bars and restaurants.
Professor Karl Linden's research in UV light featured on the Discover Magazine.
A new study headed by Professor Fernando Rozario-Ortiz will unveil a new chapter into the research on saxitoxin, the cyanotoxin responsible for the illness known as paralytic shellfish poisoning.
Assistant Professor Marina Vances group has published a new research paper titled Indoor particulate matter during HOMEChem: Concentrations, size distributions, and exposures in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.
Professor Angela Bielefeldt is starting a new research project that examines how mentoring and identity relate to retention among STEM majors in college. The work is funded by CUs Research & Innovation Office Seed Grant program and is in partnership with the School of Education.
An environmental engineering research team at CU Boulder has been chosen to study the fate of airborne coronavirus indoors.The study aims to test airborne coronavirus disinfection responses using the large bioaerosol chamber in Professor Mark Hernandez lab.
Professor Shelly Miller has joined the popular science journal Environmental Science & Technology (ES&T) as an associate editor. Miller will be responsible for reviewing all material published in ES&T alongside the editor in chief and fellow associate editors.
Professor R. Scott Summers was awarded the 2020 Charles R. OMelia Distinguished Educator Award by the Association of Environmental Engineering & Science Professors (AEESP).