Keck Foundation grants CSU $1 million to make and measure nanoscale spin waves
The next big advances in computer memory, digital storage and other electronics are going to come from very small places: the spins of individual electrons.
The next big advances in computer memory, digital storage and other electronics are going to come from very small places: the spins of individual electrons.
Two associate professors in occupational therapy were recognized for their excellence in research, education and service.
Ellison Carter is conducting a study to learn more about the impacts of air pollution from household use of solid fuels in rural regions of Beijing, China.
Emily Fischer, assistant professor of atmospheric science and a board member of the Earth Science Women’s Network, accepted the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring on behalf of the organization.
CSU physicist Kate Ross studies exotic states in quantum magnets under extreme conditions.
Wilson is proposing a radical new imaging technology that could diagnose mitochondrial defects in an instant.
The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering received the N. Preston Davis Award for Instructional Innovation, honoring its work to reinvent the way students perceive and learn engineering.
Jesse Wilson is accelerating research to improve imaging and detection of melanoma, the most deadly form of skin cancer.
The Division of External Relations and its campus communications partners collected another round of awards from the Colorado chapter of the Public Relations Society of America last week.