21st Century Energy Transition Symposium: new name, broader scope
The sixth annual event, formerly known as the Natural Gas Symposium, will take place Sept. 28-29 in the Lory Student Center.
The sixth annual event, formerly known as the Natural Gas Symposium, will take place Sept. 28-29 in the Lory Student Center.
CSU physicists, joining the fundamental pursuit of using electron spins to store and manipulate information, have demonstrated a new approach to low-power computer memory.
Assistant professors Tim Stasevich and Brian Musky have received a four-year, $1.2 million grant from the W.M. Keck Foundation for a project that combines sensitive microscopes and sophisticated computation.
A newly funded project is aimed at providing miners a low-cost, high-fidelity communication system.
Students vote on facility fees to be charged as well as how they will be spent at CSU.
The summit will feature sessions on energy policy, natural gas markets, and a panel with CSU Energy Institute Director Bryan Willson.
Two separate, international scientific collaborations studying neutrinos have reported new insights into how neutrinos behave. CSU researchers have played a significant role in both.
CSU researchers are seeking about 50 volunteers to participate in the study, which they’ll launch this fall at the Powerhouse Energy Campus.
Faculty, staff and students from the Department of Chemistry and the College of Natural Sciences finished the week with a celebratory lunch at the construction site of the new building, set to open roughly a year from now.
Materials scientists have created a “superhydrophobic” coating that easily slicks away viscous liquids like syrup, honey and ketchup.