Research Report
A group of students from the Paul M. Rady Department of MechanicalEngineering have developed a compactable antenna that could allow formore powerful radio communications from the small satellites of the future.
A new miniature satellite designed and built atCU Boulders Laboratory for Atmospheric andSpace Physics (LASP) has mighty goals.
Over the next two years, CU Boulder undergraduates working as flight controllers at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) will help manage the day-to-day mission operations of NASAs Imaging X-Ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) spacecraft.
CU Boulders Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics continues to build a legacy of expanding the frontiers of scientific knowledge.
A wealth of research, education, federal labs, established industry leaders and startups is creating a Quantum Silicon Valley.
A team of CU Boulder engineers,and one startup company calledLongPath Technologies, aretaking a whiff of that Coloradoair: Theyre using advanced lasertechnology to spot methane leakingfrom pipes at oil and gas operationsacross the West.
For over a decade, scientists have attemptedto synthesize a new form of carbon calledgraphyne with limited success.
CU Boulder, which earned the Innovation & Economic Prosperity (IEP) designation in 2019 from the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU), received the APLUs Innovation Award in 2021.
CU Boulder and CSU Pueblo are partnering on a research study to investigate whether lending laptop computers improves graduation rates and other academic performance indicators for firstyear students with unmet financial need.
The old saying a carpenter is only as good as his tools is equally appropriate for the modern-day researcher: More than ever, truly pioneering research depends on world-class infrastructure, including high performance computing.