Research
- CU «Ƶ’s College of Engineering and Applied Science held steady as a top 20 undergraduate engineering program in U.S.
- Bruns started a company with tattoo-artist-to-the-stars Keith “Bang Bang” McCurdy, along with a former doctoral student. Early next year, they plan to release their first product, Magic Ink, to a group of handpicked artists.
- Embark aims to connect business minds outside the university with breakthrough inventions emerging from CU «Ƶ’s research labs to bring them to market and unleash the full impact of CU «Ƶ’s research into the world.
- Point Designs, a revolutionary company, is using cutting-edge technology to help the healthcare industry by providing finger prosthetics.
- Researchers believe the next generation of tattoos will be about more than just markings – by helping keep tabs on our health.
- A team of engineers from CU «Ƶ have created a one-of-a-kind, shape-shifting display made from a 10-by-10 grid of soft robotic “muscles.”
- Research Professor Svenja Knappe is at the center of a growing cluster of quantum researchers who are ushering in the second quantum revolution on campus and abroad.
- At Q-SEnSE, an NSF Quantum Leap Challenge Institute led by CU «Ƶ, multidisciplinary teams investigate promising solutions to formidable quantum challenges. In this recently released video, watch Q-SEnSE leaders, faculty and students discuss just a few of their recent projects.
- An exceptionally versatile and promising NIST technology now available for patent licensing or a CRADA is the "Atomic Magnetometer and method of sensing of magnetic fields."
- Potentially harmful chemicals generated by the Marshall Fire in late 2021 may have lingered inside some «Ƶ County homes for weeks after the disaster—hiding in small particles of dust that residents could have mixed back into the air when they vacuumed carpets or turned on fans, according to recent research.