News

  • Working with GPS in the Artic.
    Scientific American is exploring GPS applications that go far beyond map wayfinding. They've published an article highlighting a numerous Coloradans doing exciting work with GPS systems, including Smead Aerospace Professor Emerita Kristine Larson,
  • OSIRIS-REx rendering
    Researchers at CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ have gotten front-row seats to one of the closest encounters with an asteroid in history. On Dec. 4, 2018, NASA’s Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security-Regolith Explorer (OSIRIS-REx)
  • A student holding a UAV.
    Researchers from CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ flew drones into severe storms this spring for project TORUS, one of the largest and most ambitious drone-based investigations of meteorological phenomena ever, with students leading much of the work.
  • People in NASA's new spacesuits
    From CBS 4 Denver: It’s been a historic week for NASA, first with the unveiling of the new American spacesuit to be used in the next mission to the moon, then with the rescheduling of the first-ever all female spacewalk that had been previously
  • Axelrad at NAE.
    The National Academy of Engineering has officially elected Ann and H.J. Smead Aerospace Engineering Sciences professor Penina Axelrad as a new member. Election to the prestigious academy is among the highest professional distinctions
  • A student working at a computer.
    In a statewide effort to reduce barriers to higher education, all 32 public universities in Colorado – including CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ – and several private colleges will waive admissions application fees for state residents on Oct. 15.  For
  • Hermann Kaptui
    Hermann Kaptui had been rejected from an aerospace internship, again. He had the right academic background, but was missing an important personal credential: United States citizenship. Kaptui, an aerospace PhD student at CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ, had found
  • Iain Boyd
    Iain Boyd is thinking fast. Extremely fast. So fast that breaking the sound barrier is practically standing still. Welcome to the world of hypersonics, where the minimum speed is it least 3,836 mph, or five times the speed of sound. Boyd's work
  • Rendering of a brain
    Sanghamitra Neogi is part of a team seeking nothing less than a revolutionary leap forward in computing technology by making computers work more like the human brain. The National Science Foundation thinks they may be onto something and has awarded a two-year, $1.7 million "Ideas Lab" grant to further the research. Investigations into...
  • By precisely sensing disturbing forces acting on spacecraft in interplanetary space, quantum sensors could reduce dependence on tracking from the Earth and enhance autonomy for deep space exploration.
    Researchers in the CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ College of Engineering and Applied Science are part of a new National Science Foundation award that could have applications in deep space exploration. The three-year award, titled Quantum Control of Ultracold Atoms in
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