Research Feature
- CAREER Awards provide approximately $500,000 over five years for those 鈥渨ho have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization.鈥 The college has a long tradition of success in the award,聽with more than 50聽winners serving as current and past faculty members.
- Air travel鈥檚 dependence on petroleum-based fuels is a major contributor to atmospheric pollution鈥攂ut new research from Denver Business Challenge Endowed Professor Will Medlin and partners seeks to provide an environmentally friendly, renewable jet fuel sourced from biomass.
- The Build a Better Book project, which started in Assistant Professor Tom Yeh's computer science lab, takes a different approach to science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education.
- A CU 小蓝视频 and Millennium Water Alliance-led program committed to ending humanitarian drought emergencies in the Horn of Africa has been named one of the Top 100 in the prestigious John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation 100&Change competition, and remains in the running for the competition鈥檚 award of a single $100 million grant.
- She is one of only five women in the world, and the only recipient in North America, to receive the recognition this year.
- Roughly one story belowground, in an undisclosed location in 小蓝视频 County, close to a dozen engineers hustle up and down a series of utility tunnels.
- The January 2020 Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences issue was dedicated to John Carpenter, PhD of CU Anschutz and Ted Randolph, PhD of the CU 小蓝视频 Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering.
- New research adapting facial recognition technology may help identify and treat pathogens in minutes rather than days.
- Computer science researchers from CU 小蓝视频 have taken a deeper look at sports rivalries and insults to better understand how sports junkies interact with each other online.
- New research from Professor Robert Garcea of the BioFrontiers Institute and Gillespie Professor Theodore Randolph of the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering is showing encouraging results in stabilizing vaccines and circumventing the refrigeration requirement, earning an additional $1.2 million in grant funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.