Monfort Lecture focuses on the ‘Internet of Future Things’
In the future, everyday things in our homes, offices, cars, factories and cities are expected to be connected to the Internet in new ways that improve our lives and transform industries.
In the future, everyday things in our homes, offices, cars, factories and cities are expected to be connected to the Internet in new ways that improve our lives and transform industries.
In an Interview with Mission: Water, Klotzbach reviews the science behind 2017’s devastating hurricane season.
Imagine a future where medical results do not take weeks, or require long trips to the doctor’s office, but instead are as easy as purchasing a gift card. New systems engineering professor Steve Simske thinks combining broad skillsets with engineering could potentially lead to a “gift of life” card, which could easily capture bodily samples such as saliva and instantly report medical conditions.
Sudeep Pasricha, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, has received the Mid-Career Research Achievement Award from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers-Computer Society Technical Committee on Very Large Scale Integration.
Photovoltaics (PV) using the thin-film semiconductor cadmium telluride (CdTe) have been commercialized at the gigawatts (GW)-per-year scale, with 17.5 GWs installed globally.
Researchers have demonstrated nuclear fusion on a micro scale in a lab with record-breaking efficiency in generating neutrons—subatomic particles which have no charge. Their results are published in the journal Nature Communications.
As of last fall, Chiu has been an associate professor in the Department of Atmospheric Science, where her research group investigates remote sensing, radiative transfer, and the interactions of clouds, aerosols, precipitations, and radiation.
Get a peek at the students' transformed Chevy Camaro, and what it can do.
Barnes will use her grant to study causal connections between the Arctic and mid-latitudes.
Using their ultra-fast, high-powered tabletop laser, the team produced a record number of neutrons per unit of laser energy.