A traffic cop for the cell surface: Illuminating a basic biological process
Scientists have shed light on a long-obscured cellular process: a mammalian cell membrane's relationship with a scaffolding underneath it, the cortical actin cytoskeleton.
Scientists have shed light on a long-obscured cellular process: a mammalian cell membrane's relationship with a scaffolding underneath it, the cortical actin cytoskeleton.
The Walter Scott, Jr. College of Engineering has announced a gift of a customized C-band radar from the company Vaisala.
A material created by CSU researchers is repellent to blood and could form the basis for biocompatible surgical implants.
Grad student Lei Wang earned the Biomedical Engineering Society Extended Abstract/Design and Research award.
CSU scientists have invented an ice-repellant coating that out-performs today's best de-icing products.
Arun Kota's lab has made a superomniphobic tape that, when adhered to any surface, gives the surface liquid-repelling properties.
The model would allow scientists and drug developers to better understand variability in drug concentrations among individuals in a population.
SBME is also the first accredited biomedical engineering degree in the country that has an obligatory tie to a partner degree in chemical and biological engineering, electrical engineering, or mechanical engineering.
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.
With the percentage of graduates who identify as female at 24.6 percent, the College of Engineering has gained ground in increasing recruitment and retention rates of female students.