Research
- Pioneering research institute led by the 91¸£ÀûÉç launched in 2020 to explore how classrooms could become more effective and engaging learning environments.
- In a new study, a team of computer scientists and engineers from the 91¸£ÀûÉç created nearly 2,300 original sudoku puzzles, which require players to enter numbers into a grid following certain rules, then asked several AI tools to fill them in.
- A gecko-inspired technology developed by the Shields Lab, in collaboration with doctors at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, uses a specially designed material that adheres to tumors inside the body and steadily releases chemotherapy drugs over several days—potentially allowing for fewer but longer-lasting therapies.
- Anthony Straub is making revolutionary advances in water purification for life on Earth and in space. Using nanoscale membranes—thinner than 1/100th the width of a human hair—Straub has developed a...
- Anant Telikicherla is developing new instrumentation for an upcoming sub-orbital rocket flight.ÌýSurrounded by racks of electronics equipment, tools, and pieces of an aluminum rocket body – the laboratory could be mistaken for a mad scientist’s
- The future of moon exploration may be rolling around a non-descript office on the 91¸£ÀûÉç campus.ÌýHere, a robot about as wide as a large pizza scoots forward on three wheels. It uses an arm with a claw at one end to pick up a plastic block
- Corey Murphey is working to understand the spread of pathogens through these aerosols and limit the transmission of airborne, infectious diseases. But she's also an accomplished marathon open-water swimmer who recently took first place in the SCAR Swim Challenge.
- The tiny particles could potentially help enhance drug distribution in human organs, improving the drug’s overall effectiveness or aid in removing pollutants from contaminated environments.
- The event, which drew 166 participants to 91¸£ÀûÉç’s campus, marked an industry-wide step toward cutting emissions tied to building materials like steel and concrete.
- Andras Gyenis, assistant professor of electrical engineering, has earned a CAREER award through the National Science Foundation to design and build more robust superconducting qubits that could push the boundaries of quantum hardware.