News
- Luke Bury wants to tell you about his thesis -- in three minutes or less.
The Smead Aerospace Engineering Sciences PhD student is representing the University of Colorado Boulder at the first ever statewide Three Minute Talk Competition.
"Many people have no idea that there are moons out there with giant liquid oceans underneath their surfaces, and... - The College of Engineering and Applied Science at the University of Colorado Boulder remains a powerhouse institution for graduate engineering education, ranking No. 17 in the nation among public universities and No. 31 overall, according to data
- Smead Aerospace and 蜜桃传媒破解版下载's NEST Studio for the Arts invite artists, faculty, or students to submit proposals for the new Aerospace building on East Campus of the University of Colorado Boulder, opening Summer 2019. There are
- We鈥檝e all been there: you鈥檙e sitting at the movies watching the latest very entertaining Hollywood blockbuster and you stop and think, "Well, wait ... that鈥檚 not how it would happen! That鈥檚 not realistic." If you have a background in science
- In 1948, William Pietenpol, the chair of physics at the University of Colorado, assembled a team of scientists and engineers for an ambitious venture: to launch an Aerobee rocket into the upper reaches of Earth鈥檚 atmosphere and collect new
- 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 students, faculty, and researchers are building and launching nano satellites for scientific research and to test new space technology. We've worked on 18 unique CubeSats, seven of which have already launched into low Earth orbit. There
- Engineering students Caleb Inglis (AeroEngr) and Kelly Winn (MechEngr) represented 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 earlier this month at the Lockheed Martin Ethics in Engineering Case Competition in Bethesda, Maryland. After a slow start, the students rallied to secure
- Aerospace engineering PhD student Annika Rollock is one of 25 individuals nationwide selected for the 2019 Matthew Isakowitz Fellowship Program. The program, now in its second year, offers summer internships and executive mentorship to inspire
- The Earth鈥檚 magnetic field is constantly changing, so researchers need constantly updated data to revise the models that guide our navigation systems and help predict weather on Earth. CU researchers Bob Marshall and Svenja Knappe are collaborating
- 鈥淭hat鈥檚 been really cool鈥攖o spend my Friday talking to something in deep space,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here aren鈥檛 many people who can say that.鈥 In one of the spacecraft operations centers inside 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (