Science & Technology
- <p>Arts and Culture Week, the annual celebration of ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß artistic and cultural resources, begins Sept. 12 with a variety of free and low-cost events for campus and community audiences.</p>
- <p>DENVER—University of Colorado faculty researchers secured more than $790 million in sponsored research funding in fiscal year 2010-11 to advance scientific work in laboratories and in the field.</p>
- <p>During the past 10 years two Colorado professors have collected the widest available base of knowledge about people who practice self-injury and now are offering new insights into people who deliberately injure themselves by cutting, burning, branding and bone-breaking.</p>
- <p>NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, which is carrying a suite of instruments including a $32 million ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß package, has provided scientists with new information that energy from some solar flares is stronger and lasts longer than previously thought.</p>
- <p>The Tempest unmanned aircraft -- a ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß-developed system that was the first to intercept a "supercell" thunderstorm -- will be exhibited at a Capitol Hill event on Wednesday, Sept. 7, from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. in room 902 of the Hart Senate Office Building, located on Constitution Avenue between 1st and 2nd Streets NE in Washington, D.C.</p>
- <p>A surprising new discovery by the ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß and the University of California, Davis regarding the division of tiny "power plants" within cells known as mitochondria has implications for better understanding a wide variety of human diseases and conditions due to mitochondrial defects.</p>
- <p>American pikas, the chirpy, potato-sized denizens of rocky debris in mountain ranges and high plateaus in western North America, are holding their own in the Southern Rocky Mountains, says a new ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß study.</p>
- <p>The ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß has partnered with the Mind Research Network in Albuquerque, N.M., to bring to campus a state-of-the-art magnetic resonance scanner that will significantly enhance the neuroimaging capabilities on campus.</p>
- <p>Graphene, considered the most exciting new material under study in the world of nanotechnology, just got even more interesting, according to a new study by a group of researchers at the ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß.</p>
- <p>Fourteen graduate students from the Engineering for Developing Communities program at the ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß traveled abroad this summer to gain field experience in community development.</p>