Why methane emissions matter to climate change: 5 questions answered
CSU energy scholars Anthony Marchese and Dan Zimmerle explain the sources of methane from natural gas and what regulatory rollbacks could mean (The Conversation).
CSU energy scholars Anthony Marchese and Dan Zimmerle explain the sources of methane from natural gas and what regulatory rollbacks could mean (The Conversation).
CSU engineering alumnus Rick Dennison is making waves as the offensive line coach for the Minnesota Vikings (Minneapolis Star Tribune).
NPR's Nerdette podcast talks with CSU atmospheric scientist Jessie Creamean about her role in the largest Central Arctic expedition ever (NPR/WBEZ).
Several instruments and spacecraft from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, incuding TEMPEST-D, have eyes on Hurricane Dorian, capturing different types of data from the storm (NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory).
It doesn't mean the world can wait until 2030 to cut greenhouse gas emissions, or that chaos will erupt in 2030. Here's what the science shows (Inside Climate News).
There are even stranger ideas for how to take down a tropical cyclone than bombing it with a nuclear warhead, as President Trump suggested (National Geographic).
For years, there has been fierce debate over water levels at a popular lake. Senator James Inhofe, who has a vacation home there, took the matter to Washington (New York Times).
CSU atmospheric science professor Scott Denning discusses that of the many reasons to be appalled by this year’s Amazon fires, depleting Earth’s oxygen supply is not one of them (The Conversation).
Colorado State University students on a summer study abroad course in Ecuador put the extraordinary amount of knowledge they had learned in their courses to the test by helping create prosthetic devices.
At Colorado State University a team of researchers has created a number of small, lightweight robots that are capable of reconfiguring themselves in response to different user requirements (IMechE).