News

  • Flood damage.
    Tornadoes, floods, fires and more affect 160 million people per year worldwide. On this episode of the CU ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Brainwaves podcast, what science is doing to help people and their property survive. Interviews include Lori Peek, director of the
  • Isakowitz Fellows with Buzz Aldrin
    Annika Rollock (Advisor: Bobby Braun) is a second year PhD student in the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences and a 2019 Matthew Isakowitz Fellow. The Matthew Isakowitz Fellowship Program is an internship and mentorship
  • A solar flare.
    Declassified files are showing researchers the unpredictable nature of the Sun and helping them work towards predicting the next big solar storm. Seeker sat down with Smead Aerospace Research Professor Delores Knipp to find out more. Watch the full
  • Ian Geraghty and Xinzhao Chu in Antarctica.
    Ian Geraghty (AeroEngr BS'19) is in the middle of yearlong research experience in one of the most inaccessible and extreme places on Earth: Antarctica. He's using lidar -- a pulsed laser system -- aimed at the sky to study the atmosphere at altitudes so high Earth weather and space weather interact.
  • Molon Labe Seating design.
    Hank Scott, a lecturer in Smead Aerospace, and Kevin VanLiere (MechEngr BS'95) are working to improve the design of the middle seat on airplanes. They've received major media attention for their startup, Molon Labe Seating, which has just received
  • An image taken from the International Space Station shows orange swaths of airglow hovering in Earth’s atmosphere. NASA’s new Atmospheric Waves Experiment will observe this airglow from a perch on the space station to help scientists understand, and ultimately improve forecasts of, space weather changes in the upper atmosphere.
    Jeff Forbes is working on a research project slated for the International Space Station (ISS) to help us better understand and forecast conditions on the edge of space. NASA is funding the Atmospheric Waves Experiment (AWE) to analyze gravity (or β€œbuoyancy”) waves in a region of the upper atmosphere that can cause disruptions in...
  •  A mock-up of what a LunaSat might look like on the moon.
    Fifty years ago today, the command module of the Apollo 11 spacecraft splashed down in the Pacific Ocean, safely returning the first astronauts to set foot on the moon.  Now, students from Colorado and across the world will continue that legacy
  • Jade Morton with RIN President Prof Terry Moore and Princess Royal Highness Anne for RIN Fellowship
    Professor Jade Morton has been elected a fellow of the United Kingdom's Royal Institute of Navigation in a ceremony that featured Princess Anne.

    Morton's selection is in recognition of her significant contributions to the understanding of ionospheric effects on navigation satellite signals, development of...
  • The hypersonics conference underway.
    The top researchers in the field of hypersonics have wrapped up a week-long conference highlighting the latest developments in the subject. The 2019 Hypersonic Aerothermodynamics Portfolios Review, sponsored by the Air Force Office of Scientific
  • The moon landing
    On July 20, 1969, astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin took their first steps on the moon. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of that landmark event, CU ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ is highlighting the stories of scientists and engineers from across the university
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