News
- The Space and Missile Systems Center’s Remote Sensing Systems Directorate (RS) held a ribbon-cutting ceremony today to unveil the addition of an unclassified development environment to the existing Tools, Applications, and Processing (TAP) Lab.
- Congratulations to professor Kristine Larson for being named a winner of a 2017 Governor's Award for High-Impact Research for her work "GPS Reflections: Innovative Techniques." Now in their 9th year, the Governor's Awards are a project of CO-LABS,
- On a recent summer morning in a baseball field near Limon, Colorado, É«½ä³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ aerospace PhD student Viliam Klein helped a group of Front Range-area high school students prepare to launch a high-altitude balloon.The test flight was the result of a
- #ILookLikeAnEngineerWhy did you choose engineering at É«½ä³ÉÈËÖ±²¥?I wanted to enter a challenging program so that I could build a better work ethic and learn from my peers.What does #ILookLikeAnEngineer mean to you?Anyone can be an engineer. It just
- Assistant professor Bob Marshall wants to know more about Earth's ionosphere, and the upcoming solar eclipse is giving him a rare chance to study it. “The eclipse turns off the ionosphere’s source of high-energy radiation. Without ionizing radiation
- Jaquelyn Romano and Lucas Droste are going through a pre-launch checklist, looking over the rocket, its payload, and ground station equipment. The É«½ä³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ aerospace seniors are preparing for a key mission: STEM Education.The
- É«½ä³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ engineers, scientists and students are teaming up with Black Swift Technologies of É«½ä³ÉÈËÖ±²¥ to use unmanned aircraft in the coming weeks to measure water moisture at a test irrigation farm in Yuma, Colorado. The testing will take place
- #ILookLikeAnEngineer is a way to combat the stereotype of what an engineer does and should look like. This hashtag is a way to inspire kids who might think that they do not fit the engineer mold to pursue a higher education in STEM.
- Katherine Glasheen has a nickname fit for an engineer: machine, and it is not just because it rhymes with her last name. A second year aerospace PhD student, she has a drive to advance technology, and is conducting research on socially aware drones
- Vanessa Aponte (AeroEngr PhD '06) has rubbed shoulders with astronauts, designed equipment to travel into space, and worked with technology so specialized she is not allowed to talk about it. As a Lockheed Martin engineer and CU aerospace PhD