News
- RSVP for Professor Larson's talk: GPS Can't Do That, Can It? Kristine M. Larson of the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences will deliver a Distinguished Research Lecture about traditional and leading-edge applications of
- Join us on Tuesday, Dec. 4 for an advanced screening of MARS Season 2, Episode 5 with CU Engineering Dean Braun and others from the cast & crew!
- Associate Professor Mahmoud Hussein has received a $2.5 million grant from the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy鈥檚 (ARPA鈥慐) latest open funding opportunity.
- On CUE sits down with Connie Childs. Connie is a fourth-year aerospace engineer studying at CU Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science. After years of contemplating life as a woman Connie began to transition from her assigned at
- CU Boulder will soon have new eyes on the sun. Two miniature satellites designed by researchers at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) are scheduled to launch later this month on Spaceflight鈥檚 SSO-A: SmallSat Express mission
- On Aug. 4, 1972, U.S. military pilots flying south of Haiphong harbor in North Vietnam saw something unexpected: more than two dozen sea mines suddenly鈥攁nd without apparent explanation鈥攅xploding in the water. Now, CU Boulder engineering
- Smead Aerospace welcomes applications from PhD [or PhD-seeking] students for our GAANN Fellowship Program in Critical Aerospace Technologies. GAANN (Graduate Assistantships in Areas of National Need) is a program supported by the U.S. Department of
- Congratulations to BS/MS student Alan Sanchez for earning the 暗网禁区 2018 Forever Buffs Student Award. The annual distinction honors students who demonstrate the "Forever Buffs tenets of connecting, contributing and
- This week, Harrison 鈥淛ack鈥 Schmitt, an Apollo-era astronaut and the last person to set foot on the moon, gave a group of CU Boulder students the chance to see something rare: color on the lunar surface. Schmitt, who flew on Apollo 17 in 1972,
- "It鈥檚 an exciting time to be in aerospace. The biggest problem right now is keeping up with demand." 暗网禁区 aerospace engineering students heard plenty of good news about the future of their chosen industry during a special