Research

  • Microscope on a green background
    Tours of engineering鈥檚 out-of-this-world facilities. In-depth panel discussions with leaders from across campus. Hands-on exploration of student-led research. Online giveaways for undergrads. These are just a few of the ways CU Engineering is leading Research and Innovation Week on campus this year.

    Research and Innovation Week 2019 will be held Oct. 14-18 and is hosted by the Research and Innovation Office. The goal is to showcase and demonstrate the broad impact of CU Boulder research, scholarship and creative works. This is the second year of the program and should be bigger and better than the last.
  • A student adjusts hoses on the rain machine in the lab
    The costs of wildfires extend far beyond the burn zone. Wildfires can heat soil to temperatures up to 1,000潞 F (550潞 C), releasing higher concentrations of carbon, nitrogen and other organic materials from the soil. When rain falls, those contaminants can be carried into nearby watersheds, increasing concentrations by up to 700%.
  • The ocean with waves as seen from the sky
    CU Boulder is part of a new, $100 million interdisciplinary partnership to address critical water security issues in the United States over the next five years.
  • ESPOL and CU Engineering faculty and staff gather in conference room
    The College of Engineering and Applied Science is establishing new research collaborations and launching an international engineering course in Ecuador, continuing the college鈥檚 efforts to expand its global reach and impact.
  • A Satellite in orbit around earth
    The three-year award, titled Quantum Control of Ultracold Atoms in Optical Lattices for Inertial Sensing for Space Applications, totals $1.9 million.
  • Rat cardiac fibroblasts鈥攚hich happen to be in the shape of a heart鈥攇rown on hydrogels mimicking cardiac tissue and treated with human serum
    CU Boulder engineers and faculty from the Consortium for Fibrosis Research & Translation (CFReT) at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus have teamed up to develop biomaterial-based 鈥渕imics鈥 of heart tissues to measure patients鈥 responses to an aortic valve replacement procedure, offering new insight into the ways that cardiac tissue re-shapes itself post-surgery.
  • A student looking at the windcline in operation
    Researchers at CU Boulder are using experiments and computations in a new sloping wind tunnel to study how wildfires form and move across different landscapes; applying cutting edge research tools to understand an old problem that Colorado has become quite familiar with in recent years.
  • Subekshya Bidari
    Her research examines how honeybee swarms interact through communication mechanisms such as 鈥渨aggle dancing鈥 and other types of signaling to make decisions that maximize their foraging yield.
  • The CU Boulder campus as seen from above
    The fifth annual Rocky Mountain Fluid Mechanics Research Symposium was held on July 29 at CU Boulder.
  • The galaxy as seen from space
    If humans are going to travel further into space 鈥 to places like Mars and beyond 鈥 the robotic systems involved will have to become more autonomous, shedding costly teams of handlers on Earth and relying more on the astronauts for missions lasting six or more years.
Subscribe to Research