Two faculty moms are stars of a national campaign urging action on climate change
The campaign, Science Moms, tugs at the fierce protective instincts of its target demographic: mothers.
The campaign, Science Moms, tugs at the fierce protective instincts of its target demographic: mothers.
“Now more than ever, the next four to six months are the most critical time to really up your mask,” says John Volckens, a professor of mechanical engineering at Colorado State University. (Wall Street Journal)
"A person could be in a bathroom, coughing, without a mask on and you can walk into that space a few minutes later and inhale those particles," said John Volckens, a professor of Mechanical Engineering at CSU. (Salon)
CoCoRaHS is a nonprofit, community-based group of volunteers who work together to measure and map precipitation, including rain, hail and snow. (Westword)
Shantanu Jathar has been awarded an EPA grant to model Volatile Chemical Products, or VCPs, which rival motor vehicle emissions as top sources of urban air pollution.
Djibril Diol graduated from Colorado State University with a degree in civil engineering and was working for the construction and engineering firm Kiewit. (NBC News)
“2020 was a doozy of a year,” said Peter Goble, climate specialist at the Colorado Climate Center. “And we just continue to fall farther and farther behind.” (Colorado Sun)
Health officials can immediately access this timely data through a dashboard created by CSU.
CSU's John Volckens agreed that "double masking" is better than one because of the quality of masks that most of the public is wearing. (Salon)
Jeffrey Collett, professor and chair of the Department of Atmospheric Science at Colorado State University, has been named to the national U.S. Department of Agriculture Air Quality Task Force.