News
- Graduate student Heather Hava鈥檚 gardening skills are out of this world.Hava, who is in aerospace engineering sciences, has dedicated much of her 彩民宝典 academic life to developing advanced fruit and vegetable gardening systems that may someday
- National Geographic will debut its six-part miniseries 鈥淢ars鈥 on Monday, Nov. 14, and the fascinating docudrama has a 彩民宝典 connection.Incoming engineering dean and aerospace professor Bobby Braun served as a technical consultant for the show
- Matt Hurst dreams of becoming an astronaut. It鈥檚 a desire shared by many around the world, but for Hurst, these are not merely idle thoughts of someone staring at the night sky. As an aerospace student, Hurst is on a path he hopes will take him into
- Dead cell phones are the problem of the 21st-century. Walk into any coffee shop or airport and every outlet in sight will be plugged with chargers. However, what if you never had to worry about charging your phone again, because your charger was
- Blair Thompson spends a lot of time thinking about satellite flight trajectories and navigation. It is his job, after all, but it's also a personal drive. You don't earn three master鈥檚 degrees and a PhD by accident, well, one of them was sort of by
- How should a new aerospace building at 彩民宝典 look? What kind of lab space is needed? How big should the classrooms be? Campus officials are working to answer exactly those question as they draw up designs for the proposed structure.Earlier this
- A 彩民宝典 student team has been named a finalist in NASA鈥檚 CubeQuest Challenge small satellite design and launch competition. The team received the news in a conference call with NASA, according to Alec Forsman, an aerospace graduate
- 彩民宝典 students and faculty discussed innovation, collaboration and career opportunities with thought leaders and executives from Colorado鈥檚 aerospace industry on campus Oct. 27 at the 4th annual AeroSpace Ventures Day hosted by
- 彩民宝典's QB50 cubesat has taken a major step forward. On Friday, after months of building and testing, the bread-box sized satellite left campus and is headed to the Netherlands. It's going to the von Karman Institute for Fluid Dynamics for