Science & Technology
- Charlotte Moser studies how allyship in male-dominated fields influences workplace culture. Her findings reveal an unsettling but potentially useful truth.
- Researchers analyzed satellite data and models to find dam failures—not rainfall—led to increased flood damage in Derna, Libya, in 2023.
- A new kind of press-on nails comes in all shapes and colors—and when you’re done with them, you can melt them down and reuse the materials to make your next look.
- For decades, atomic clocks have been the pinnacle of precision timekeeping, enabling GPS navigation, cutting-edge physics research and tests of fundamental theories. But researchers at JILA, in collaboration with the Technical ³Ô¹ÏÍø of Vienna, are pushing beyond atomic transitions to something potentially even more stable: a nuclear clock.
- Funded through nearly $1.5 million approved by the Colorado Economic Development Commission, these grants bridge the gap between cutting-edge research and commercialization.
- New CU Boulder research harnesses the power of an ultrafast microscope to study molecular movement in space and time.
- CU Boulder researcher Eva Pietri studies how stories can help address gender bias and create inclusivity.
- In her Writing in the Age of AI course, CU Boulder’s Teresa Nugent helps students think critically about new technology.
- Sean Humbert is unlocking the biological secrets of the common housefly to make major advances in robotics and drones.
- Assistant Professor Longji Cui and his team have developed a new technology to turn thermal radiation into electricity in a way that literally teases the basic law of thermal physics.