news
- Researchers working together across the University of Colorado system are developing a technique that would quickly and easily remove antibiotic-resistant bacteria in dentistry.
- Faculty at the University of Colorado Boulder are beginning interdisciplinary research that could one day bring lossless power transmission lines, quantum computing and levitating trains closer to reality in everyday life.
- Research into how light can affect material shape goes deep—rather, into the depths—by drawing inspiration from cephalopods: marine animals including squids, octopuses and cuttlefish that can change their shape and color.
- Colorado will have a role in groundbreaking technology that could change prosthetic devices forever.
- Orit Peleg is an assistant professor of Computer Science at the University of Colorado Boulder and is part of the BioFrontiers Institute at CU Boulder. Peleg seeks to understand the behavior of disordered living systems by merging tools from physics, biology, engineering and computer science.
- Over the next three years, CU Boulder researchers and their partners will develop, fabricate and test a network of 3D-printed biodegradable soil sensors aimed at allowing farmers to affordably and efficiently monitor crop conditions.
- Laura Devendorf is an assistant professor at the ATLAS Institute and part of the MFM IRT. Learn about her research and smart textiles in this video.
- University of Colorado Boulder Chemistry Professor and ATLAS faculty member Carson Bruns has developed tattoos that have the potential to save your life, featuring “smart inks” that can appear -- or disappear -- depending on shifts in physiology.
- Faculty at CU Boulder are working toward widespread adoption and practical applications for the soft robotic HASEL actuators demonstrated here earlier this year, through a new $2 million award from the National Science Foundation.
- How a new generation of grippers with improved 3D perception and tactile sensing is learning to manipulate a wide variety of objects