This Year’s Extreme Weather Is Just Getting Started
Climate change and natural variability are making 2022 a year of big weather events—so get ready for more heat waves, droughts, and hurricanes. (Wired)
Climate change and natural variability are making 2022 a year of big weather events—so get ready for more heat waves, droughts, and hurricanes. (Wired)
A chance encounter with a rare phenomenon called a milky sea connects a sailor and a scientist to explain the ocean’s ghostly glow. (Hakai Magazine)
Colorado State University engineers have partnered with third-party assessor Project Canary to develop a method for measuring freshwater usage during natural gas operations to help evaluate operators on sustainability.
Two recent CSU grads have received 2022 Activate Fellowships, awarded to entrepreneurs who are springboarding great technologies into marketable ones.
Electrical and Computer Engineering's Haonan Chen has received an early-career award to support his research on artificial intelligence techniques for detecting conditions associated with the sudden development of severe storms.
The turbine’s arrival at the Powerhouse Energy Campus marked the beginning of its new life in higher education research.
Engineers and scientists from Colorado State University and Israel joined with policy experts at a workshop in May to collaborate on solutions for sustainable agricultural water.
The catastrophic cold blast that enveloped Texas and neighboring states in February 2021 was unprecedented in its sheer longevity in some spots, a new study confirms. (Texas Climate News)
A multifaceted team at CSU has secured support from the NSF for a new high-performance computing (HPC) cyberinfrastructure to amplify research across campus.
Systems engineering master’s student Somayeh Aliebrahimi developed driving simulations with programmed cyberattacks to observe how people respond to these scenarios in autonomous driving mode.