Science & Technology
- At a recent event, students shared their ideas for how the U.S. Armed Forces can keep up with an increasingly connected world—from a strategy for resupplying ships using autonomous capsules to a device that detects GPS jamming signals.
- Colorado nail salon employees face increased health risks due to high levels of indoor airborne pollutants akin to an oil refinery or an auto garage.
- A new and unique high-resolution X-ray microtomography imaging system at the College of Engineering & Applied Science will enhance research, not only in engineering but in the fields of archaeology, geology and medicine.
- Researchers have discovered how magnets recover after being blasted by a laser. It turns out, they act a bit like oil and water in a jar.
- Researchers show that they can trap and load lone atoms into large grids with an efficiency unmatched by current methods.
- Color-changing tattoos? Nanotechnology research at ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ could lead to new ways in the future to protect against skin cancer or simply increase the ‘wow’ factor of body art.
- New research from ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ focuses on how light can manipulate the shape of man-made materials by emulating these amazing cephalopods.
- A new study debunks a popular, two-decade-old theory about the shape of networks.
- Students in a new class offered by the ATLAS Institute are stretching their technological and design skills by taking on a challenge straight from a heist movie.
- Carson Bruns is working to put body art to use, designing high-tech inks that may one day signal your temperature or changes in blood chemistry.