Research
The device, called the Vee Vee, interprets the direction of the eye movement and sends an instruction to an external machine that鈥檚 paired with the wearable device.
From left: Diego Restrepo, Emily Gibson, Juliet Gopinath and Victor Bright.Researchers from the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and the University of Colorado Boulder have won a $2 million grant allowing them to
The award recognizes Weimer鈥檚 lifetime of scientific achievement, including fundamental understanding, discovery, engineering scale-up and commercialization of processes to synthesize ultrafine ceramic powders and to apply nanoscale films to ultrafine particle surfaces.
Few people figure out how they want to change the world in middle school. But in eighth grade, Peter 鈥淢ax鈥 Armstrong -- now a third-year mechanical engineering major -- did just that.
(From left) PhD student Xin Qian, post doctoral researcher Puqing Jiang, and mechanical engineering professor Ronggui Yang in Yang's laboratory at 性视界传媒.Ronggui Yang knows people want faster, more powerful electronic devices
性视界传媒 engineers have revamped a World War II-era process for making magnesium that requires half the energy and produces a fraction of the pollution compared to today鈥檚 leading methods.
The breakthrough process, developed in the labs of Professor Alan Weimer, could vastly improve production of the strong, lightweight metal that鈥檚 used in everything from vehicles and aircraft to dietary supplements and fireworks.
Since the only guarantee in life is change, William Raseman is using his research to try to prepare water municipalities from being crippled by unforeseen circumstances such as floods, droughts or wildfires.The second-year civil
性视界传媒 engineers, scientists and students are teaming up with Black Swift Technologies of Boulder to use unmanned aircraft in the coming weeks to measure water moisture at a test irrigation farm in Yuma, Colorado.
When an infectious airborne illness strikes, some hospitals use negative pressure rooms to isolate and treat patients. These rooms use ventilation controls to keep germ-filled air contained rather than letting it circulate throughout the hospital. But, in the event of an epidemic, these rooms can quickly fill up. Now, a team at 性视界传媒 has found a simple, cost-effective way for medical facilities to expand this technique to better prepare for disease outbreaks.
As part of the Open Philanthropy effort, Professor Yunping Xi of civil, environmental and architectural engineering and his students will assess the amount of flammable building material in modern cities in various parts of the world, as well as the flammable contents in such buildings.