To track disease-carrying mosquitoes, researchers tag them with DNA barcodes
The new mosquito-tagging method being developed at CSU has the potential to revolutionize how mosquito-borne disease are studied.
The new mosquito-tagging method being developed at CSU has the potential to revolutionize how mosquito-borne disease are studied.
Moving an object weighing 33 tons is a feat in itself, but when you add its dimensions – a 28-foot by 9.5-foot by 8-foot container – and desired location, it’s no wonder that it took a year to plan the arrival of the newest engine at Colorado State University’s Powerhouse Energy Campus.
The custom-built, high-intensity flow-through photochemical reactor is being integrated into the university’s wider coronavirus and other research efforts, as it can be used to inactivate many types of viruses and pathogens.
The turbine’s arrival at the Powerhouse Energy Campus marked the beginning of its new life in higher education research.
CSU's range of expertise in finding solutions to the climate crisis was on full display during the senator's April 19 visit.
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.
A crew of CSU students worked early mornings and weekends, in all sorts of weather, to help keep campus open throughout the pandemic and academic year.
The funding will help CSU create the Rockies/Plains Energy Accelerator for Commercializing Hardtech (REACH), in collaboration with Innosphere Ventures, the Colorado Energy Research Collaboratory, and 22 other committed ecosystem partners.