Research

  • A woman in Rwanda feeds wood into a cookstove as a child looks on.
    Large-scale program in Rwanda reduced the prevalence of reported diarrhea and acute respiratory infection in children under 5, according to new findings published today in the journal PLOS Medicine.
  • Juliet Gopinath in her lab
    While the CUbit Quantum Initiative is only five months old, Associate Director Juliet Gopinath said she has been energized by the potential of the cross-campus project.
  • Formosa and endoculus
    Researchers have designed a robot to navigate the unpredictable terrain of the intestine. The group hopes the robot will one day change how millions of people across the United States get colonoscopies, making these common procedures easier for patients and more efficient for doctors.
  • Srubar talking to a student in his lab
    Wil Srubar is an assistant professor of civil, environmental and architectural engineering department at CU. Guided by the tenets of industrial ecology, his team's collective vision is to engineer next-generation infrastructure materials by blurring the boundaries between the built environment and the natural world. Materials of current interest include biodegradable polymers, phase-change materials, recycled aggregate concrete, and natural-fiber composites for green building applications.
  • Sunflower in a field of sunflowers
    Research being led by ÐÔÊӽ紫ý Assistant Professor Orit Peleg is studying social systems in sunflowers through an award from the Human Frontier Science Program.
  • Blue construction plans
    Research at ÐÔÊӽ紫ý are trying to understanding how construction plans are read on job sites and then tailoring the information to the individual. Increasing efficiency, reducing costs and – potentially – reducing the risk of an accident.
  • open house participants watching a demonstration
    The Materials Characterization Facility in the Colorado Shared Instrumentation in Nanofabrication and Characterization (COSINC) successfully hosted a focused ion beam (FIB) event in mid-April.
  • Representation of an atom
    ÐÔÊӽ紫ý has a tradition of excellence in quantum science and technology. Work in the field continues on and off campus in the many companies that have been founded by CU engineering and physics faculty and former students.
  • Al Gasiewski in his lab.
    Want more accurate weather forecasts? You’re in luck: Last month, researchers at ÐÔÊӽ紫ý saw the fruits of their labors launch aboard a new satellite. That satellite is the first in a planned fleet of Earth-orbiters that the team says will one day record weather data at every point on the globe every 15 minutes.
  • Rendering of living space on a space craft
    The College of Engineering and Applied Science at ÐÔÊӽ紫ý is part of a new NASA funded Space Technology Research Institute that will advance space habitat designs using resilient and autonomous systems. The work is part of a larger effort to prepare for a time when astronauts will venture further into space, out of low-Earth orbit and on to the Moon, Mars and beyond.
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