Summertime Standouts: David Kimmey
Kimmey is applying his engineering education to real-world medical problems, working with the Range of Motion Project in Ecuador and for Medtronic this summer.
Kimmey is applying his engineering education to real-world medical problems, working with the Range of Motion Project in Ecuador and for Medtronic this summer.
A summer journey to Normandy was the perfect choice to feed Charlotte Cerveny’s passions for history and engineering. Cerveny, a dual major in history and mechanical engineering, spent 10 days at the end of May exploring Normandy, France, and the history of World War II.
Throughout late July and August, a multi-agency, multidisciplinary team led by Colorado State University scientists will travel to Boise, Idaho, to conduct 15 to 20 smoke-observation flights.
The next big advances in computer memory, digital storage and other electronics are going to come from very small places: the spins of individual electrons.
A mobile chemistry lab built on an airplane is about to take flight, helping us learn more about the chemical composition of wildfire smoke.
Wind energy developments in Colorado are helping propel the nation’s agriculture sector forward into clean energy. A recent report from the Center for the New Energy Economy shows the benefits and potential savings for farmers.
Mechanical engineering student Jared Ham was honored as one of the “20 Twenties to Watch” in the February issue of Aviation Week & Space Technology magazine and at the annual Aviation Week Laureate Awards Gala in Washington, D.C.
The EV of 2028: quiet, safe, and efficient
A $1.2 million appropriation in the new law will go to CSU's efforts to train students and the workforce in modern cybersecurity practices and procedures.
The model could add to the strategic toolbox that protects lives and livelihoods from destructive fires.