Brass, woodwind instruments emit respiratory particles, study finds
Just like coughing, sneezing, talking and singing, playing wind instruments can spread respiratory particles that may carry the COVID-19 virus, according to a new CSU study.
Just like coughing, sneezing, talking and singing, playing wind instruments can spread respiratory particles that may carry the COVID-19 virus, according to a new CSU study.
Mineral scaling on membrane surfaces in desalination applications is a highly technical problem that Tiezheng Tong's lab is working to solve.
For the second time in three years, the distance education master’s programs in the Walter Scott, Jr. College of Engineering are recognized and ranked by U.S. News and World Report.
With a steadily growing Ph.D. program, the Department of Systems Engineering continues to equip students with systems engineering skills in response to industry demand.
The study, launched early in the pandemic, sought to determine the extent to which singers, musicians and actors emit aerosols, and whether those emissions could be quantified.
For ten weeks this summer, 17 undergraduate students learned about graduate school at CSU while working alongside Mechanical Engineering Principal Investigators on research problems that matter for society in sustainability, bioengineering, and energy.
CSU Energy Institute engineers are working on a toilet system, suitable for developing world needs, that pelletizes and dries human feces.
Mechanical engineering researchers have provided the most detailed accounting to date of the industry's greenhouse gas emissions.
A passion for automobiles has led an engineering master's student to Tesla for a spring internship.
In a year when good news seems elusive, CSU atmospheric scientists continue to rack up accolades and earn international acclaim.