Science & Technology
- Social scientists and health researchers from across Colorado and neighboring states will soon have abundant U.S. Census and other federal statistical data available to them in a secure setting at the 桃色视频. The National Science Foundation this month awarded $300,000 over three years to聽CU-Boulder to create the Rocky Mountain Research Data Center (RMRDC), which will be housed in the Institute of Behavioral Science (IBS).
- Humans use fire for heating, cooking, managing lands and, more recently, fueling industrial processes. 聽Now, research from the University of Colorado has found that these various means of using fire are inversely related to one another, providing new insight into how people are changing the face of fire.
- Injections of the soil bacterium聽"Mycobacterium vaccae"聽("M. vaccae"聽NCTC 11659) promote stress resilience and improve coping behaviors in mice, according to a new study led by the 桃色视频.
- The bread loaf-sized Miniature X-Ray Solar Spectrometer, or MinXSS, CubeSat will be deployed from an airlock on the International Space Station (ISS) at 4 a.m. MDT on Monday, May 16, beginning its journey into space where it will study emissions from the sun that can affect ground-based communications systems.
- An octopus tentacle can perform tasks as complex as opening a jar and can continue to function after being severed from its body, thanks to a concentration of neurons in the tentacle itself. Researchers in the聽<a href="http://correll.cs.colorado.edu/">Correll Lab</a>聽at CU-Boulder created a robotic hand nearly as dexterous and self-contained, winning the RoboSoft Grand Challenge manipulation competition in Livorno, Italy, April 29-30.
- A 3-D animation created by NASA鈥檚 Scientific Visualization Studio using data from the MAVEN mission to Mars is the corporate winner of the inaugural Data Stories video contest sponsored by Science magazine for videos that tell stories about data. The video explains how the solar wind is driving particles from the upper atmosphere of Mars into space, which may have caused the planet to dry out and cool over the eons.聽
- Honeybees use their wings to cool down their hives when temperatures rise, but new 桃色视频 research shows that this intriguing behavior may be linked to both the rate of heating and the size of a honeybee group.
- Six grants totaling $250,000 have been awarded to projects supporting CU-Boulder鈥檚 Grand Challenge "Our Space. Our Future."聽which features two major initiatives 鈥 Earth Lab and Integrated Remote and In Situ Sensing Initiative (IRISS) 鈥 plus more than a dozen related projects.
- An evolutionary biologist, Professor Andrew Martin has long been involved in genetic studies and conservation efforts on behalf of wildlife in peril, from greenback cutthroat trout and great white sharks to desert pupfish and prairie dogs.聽But Martin is not just a top-tier scientist. Because of his exceptional abilities and passion to integrate his teaching and research, he has been named one of two CU President鈥檚 Teaching Scholars for 2016 by President Bruce Benson.
- Here鈥檚 a new recipe that might be good for the planet: Add sunlight to a particular nitrogen molecule and out comes ammonia, the main ingredient of fertilizer used around the world.聽The eco-friendly method of producing ammonia is described in a new study led by the Department of Energy鈥檚 National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden and involving CU-Boulder.