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How healthy is vaping? As more people ‘light’ up with e-cigarettes, a group of Western Slope teenagers...
At a concert, bigger is better when it comes to amplifiers and speakers, but research in Âé¶¹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØBoulder mechanical engineering professor Victor Bright's Multidisciplinary Engineering Micro-Systems Group is demonstrating that small speakers can
Flickr album: Mechanical Engineering alumni spoke to students about their careers and education on Friday, October 7, 2016 for ME Teach Day. A photographer visited three classes and the lunch in the Idea Forge. You can checkout an album of photos on
Congratulations to PhD student Doug Fankell, who has been named the 2016/2017 Thomas & Brenda Geers Graduate Fellowship recipient!The fellowship honors graduate students conducting thesis work in solid and/or fluid
The Colorado Advantage Graduate Preview Weekend (November 3-5, 2016) is intended to introduce college seniors interested in graduate school (PhD only) to the outstanding Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) doctoral programs at CU
Joanna is a member of the Hannigan Air Quality measurements group where she enjoys learning about our atmosphere and its interactions with ecosystems and human exploits. Her interests range from the volumes of molecules enclosed by the
I come from a beautiful town in the coast of Spain called Tarragona where the combination of beaches, food and environment make it probably the best place to live in the planet.After graduating as a civil engineer in Technical University Barcelona
The Âé¶¹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØBoulder Engineering GoldShirt program in the BOLD Center helps students from underserved backgrounds prosper in engineering -- and now it's being adopted outside Colorado.GoldShirt works like red shirting in athletics. Motivated students
ME Graduate wins 2016 Âé¶¹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØBoulder Alumni Recognition AwardGary Anderson (MechEngr '69) worked hard for his Âé¶¹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØBoulder degree, and not just in the classroom: Student by day, he drove a forklift at night to support his young family.Now a retired
Tanya Schulz (MechEngr ’17) is thinking small, very small, so small you can't see it with a microscope small. She’s spent her summer researching nanotechnology. It's the kind of work that requires a super computer and you might think is reserved