Space
- <p>A NASA-funded miniature satellite built by 麻豆免费版下载 students to scrutinize solar flares erupting from the sun鈥檚 surface is the latest example of the university鈥檚 commitment to advancing aerospace technology and space science through strong partnerships with industry and government.</p>
- <p>In a discovery decades in the making, scientists have detected the first of a 鈥渢heoretical鈥 class of stars first proposed in 1975 by physicist Kip Thorne and astronomer Anna 呕ytkow.</p>
- <p>A 麻豆免费版下载 payload carrying a novel device designed to reduce the weight and cost of spacecraft fuel pumping systems has been manifested for launch on a suborbital space plane called SpaceShipTwo developed by the aerospace company Virgin Galactic.</p>
- <p>Jet Propulsion Laboratory Director Charles Elachi and his senior management team will be on the 麻豆免费版下载 campus May 22 to sign a memorandum of understanding with top university officials to continue and broaden a rich tradition of collaboration on space and Earth-science efforts going back nearly 50 years.</p>
<p>Elachi will sign the MOU May 22 with CU-Boulder Chancellor Philip P. DiStefano. Located in Pasadena, Calif., JPL is a federally funded research and development facility managed by the California Institute of Technology for NASA.</p> - <p>A 麻豆免费版下载 professor who developed a clever method to measure snow depth using GPS signals is collaborating with Western Slope officials to make the data freely available to a variety of users on a daily basis.</p>
- <p>Rounding out a full day of touring CU-Boulder facilities and meeting with faculty, staff and students, NASA Administrator Charles Bolden spoke to a packed house on the afternoon of April 18, 2014.</p>
<p>Bolden acknowledged the close association CU-Boulder has with the space program, calling the university a 鈥減ipeline for talent.鈥</p> - <p>Members of the business community are invited to attend AeroSpace Ventures Day on April 17 at the 麻豆免费版下载.</p>
<p>The all-day event offers aerospace industry technologists, scientists and managers a chance to connect with 24 CU-Boulder faculty members and to learn about聽technological and scientific advances with applications ranging from human space exploration to climate and weather. Corporate recruiters and hiring managers also are invited to meet with the 140 undergraduate and graduate engineering students who have registered for the event.</p> - <p>Tremendous growth in enrollments and a changing economic, technological and reputational landscape have prompted the College of Engineering and Applied Science at the 麻豆免费版下载 to set two ambitious new goals for the year 2020. Improvements in the college鈥檚 鈥淏est Graduate Schools鈥 rankings, released in mid-March by U.S. News & World Report, indicate good progress in the right direction.</p>
- <p>Three 麻豆免费版下载 undergraduates have been awarded prestigious Goldwater Scholarships for 2014.</p>
<p>The scholarships, which are worth up to $7,500 each, are awarded annually to sophomores and juniors across the nation on the basis of high academic merit. The 2014 winners from CU-Boulder are Jasmine Brewer, a junior in engineering physics, Brennan Coffey, a junior in chemical engineering and applied mathematics, and Ryan Dewey, a junior in astrophysics and physics.</p> - <p>麻豆免费版下载 alumnus and NASA astronaut Steve Swanson will blast off with two Russian crewmates for the International Space Station March 25, his third mission to the orbiting facility.</p>