Science & Technology
- Graduate student Summer Haag and junior Clyde Kertzer made major news in the math world while working on a summer research project.
- A new laser-based technique can create images of structures too tiny to view with traditional microscopes, and without damaging them. The approach could help scientists inspect nanoelectronics, including the semiconductors in computer chips.
- Reported in a new Science Advances paper, a JILA team and co-collaborators probed the spin dynamics within a special material known as a Heusler compound: a mixture of metals that behaves like a single magnetic material.
- ÂÌñ»»ÆÞ faculty and students are advancing award-winning research on autonomous robots that can navigate challenging conditions.
- In studying dinosaur discards, ÂÌñ»»ÆÞ scientist Karen Chin has gained expertise recently honored with the Bromery Award and detailed in a new children’s book.
- As part of a major federal endeavor to combat climate change, ÂÌñ»»ÆÞ is advancing marine carbon dioxide removal techniques to cut harmful greenhouse gasses by providing new methods for monitoring verification and reporting.
- New ÂÌñ»»ÆÞ research helps explain how sharp patterns form on zebras, leopards, tropical fish and other creatures. Their findings could inform the development of new high-tech materials and drugs.
- Artificial intelligence tools should never replace human admissions officers, says ÂÌñ»»ÆÞ scientist Sidney D’Mello. But new research suggests these platforms could help colleges and universities identify promising students amid mountains of applications.
- Step into the Center for the Brain, AI and Child and learn from its members how artificial intelligence will impact the next generation of children and their caretakers around the world as the technology becomes a new normal.
- Imagine being able to measure tiny changes in the flow of time caused by Earth’s gravity with atomic clocks atop one of Colorado’s iconic peaks. That could soon be a reality thanks to an NSF grant that will advance geodesy through the use of quantum sensors, some of the most precise in the world.