Energy Institute students benefit from Caterpillar engine donation
Caterpillar Inc. donated a gas petroleum engine used in oil and gas technology for new research projects and testing at the Energy Institute.
Caterpillar Inc. donated a gas petroleum engine used in oil and gas technology for new research projects and testing at the Energy Institute.
Three Colorado State University students participated in the Colorado Science and Engineering Policy Fellowship, a program that places STEM majors in an eight-week summer internship involving STEM policy research, seminars and industry site visits.
The record-setting wildfires causing widespread destruction in California are fueling research on the danger of the air pollution they spew—and how far across the country the pollution could spread.
The CSU Atmospheric Cyclists, a team composed of Department of Atmospheric Science and Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA) members, won this year's Bike to Work Challenge, sponsored by the City of Loveland.
Mohammadhasan Hedayati, a graduate student in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, earned a spot in the 2018-19 VPR Fellowship Cohort.
CSU’s ChemE Car took first place at the regional competition, and hope to continue their winning streak at nationals in Pittsburgh this October.
Twenty-four students recently traveled to Ecuador as part of the Range of Motion Project. The experience helped them see how their training can prepare them for careers helping individuals with limb loss.
It is as seemingly inevitable as the wildfires that burn hotter and longer each summer: Smoke from distant (or, in some cases, nearby) fires floats into the mid-valley and can linger for days or weeks.
In May, the School of Biomedical Engineering led a study abroad course in Quito, Ecuador to work with Range of Motion Project volunteers and learn how to build and fit prostheses for patients.
Colleagues, friends, family and former students of Professor Emeritus Wayne Schubert gathered July 27 at the Department of Atmospheric Science to honor the scientist’s “retirement,” or lack of it. After 45 years with the department, Schubert has no intention of leaving research or the department.