Research Report
- Jamie Principato wants to ensure that blind students can excel in science and engineering careers. So the CU undergraduate is parlaying her own experience in designing and building space instruments to help them get the training they’ll need.
- ​Amputees face a perpetual problem: As their residual limb changes over time, the prosthetic socket no longer secures the prosthetic to the limb, rendering their device essentially useless.
- The Galápagos Islands are home to a tremendous diversity of unique plants and animals.
- From the very first roll call of the school year, students whose last names start with letters at the beginning of the alphabet may be at an advantage.
- Norlin Library, already host to a seemingly endless number of books, is now home to a very valuable collection.
- A sofa twisted into a knot, a dining table bulging with a roller-coaster-like loop, a massive picnic table curled into a question mark. These shapes don’t occur naturally—they’re the creations of Assistant Professor Michael Beitz.
- Two CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ engineers have pioneered an ingenious way to turn Colorado’s booming craft beer economy into renewable power.
- In 1997, Professor Al Weimer of chemical and biological engineering and Professor Steven George of chemistry began collaborating on a novel process of coating surfaces with the thinnest of materials possible, known as atomic layer deposition (ALD).