They ran, they swam, they competed: Engineering faculty and staff who were college athletes a rare bunch
The Walter Scott, Jr. College of Engineering boasts alumni as well as faculty and staff who were athletes in college.
The Walter Scott, Jr. College of Engineering boasts alumni as well as faculty and staff who were athletes in college.
CBE Professor Brad Reisfeld was recently appointed to a review committee of the National Academies studying a carcinogen called trichloroethylene.
Nearly 500 graduating engineering students will compete in the annual E-Days competition on April 22 at the LSC.
As news of Emeritus Professor Vince Murphy's passing started to circulate, warm sentiments were repeated by faculty, students, and others in the university community who had known him.
While the campus and state wastewater testing programs have functioned well as part of the overall pandemic response, Susan De Long and her collaborators want to streamline the process so it can be applied more broadly.
Brad Reisfeld, Chemical and Biological Engineering professor, is spending the year as a visiting senior scientist at the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France.
Thanks to a year-long grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, a team of engineering students took their skills to new heights against a major threat to our way of life – harmful algal blooms.
CSU atmospheric scientists and engineers will study the aerobiome — microbes in the air — as part of a new $12.5 million NSF project.
A team from CSU is working to boost algae crop growth to reach industrial levels, with the team being awarded $3.2m from the DOE in support of this goal earlier this month. (Bio Market Insights)
The U.S. Department of Energy chose CSU engineers and biologists to engineer algae strains and improve cultivation operations to boost algae's rate of biomass production by 20%. (9News Denver)