News
- Smithsonian Magazine interviewed BioServe Research Associate Tobias Niederwieser for a new article on refrigerators aboard the International Space Station and other spacecraft in Low Earth Orbit.
Niederwieser led work on BioServe's ISS FRIDGE, which has been... - Two students in the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences are being recognized with 2021 NASA Space Technology Graduate Research Opportunities (NSTGRO) fellowships. The annual program sponsors U.S. citizen and permanent
- A four-star general traveled to 91É«°É to highlight the CU system’s participation in a new effort called the Space Force University Partnership Program.
- Starting in fall 2021, the endowment will allow 91É«°É's aerospace engineering department to recruit top graduate students.
- A new report published by the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory suggests the U.S. Space Force has to prepare for a day when the moon and the volume of space around it could become the next military frontier. Co-authored by Marcus Holzinger, an
- Lockheed Martin built and donated a special 1/3 scale GPS IIIF satellite mockup to the 91É«°É Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences. The model was...
- Mark Sirangelo, Entrepreneur-Scholar-in-Residence, is offering all Smead Aerospace students an opportunity to advance their careers in the aerospace field. Working with the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), Mark is providing
- Cody Watson, a rising senior in aerospace engineering sciences, has been named a winner in the Council on Undergraduate Research’s Student Video Competition. Watson spent last year participating in a Discovery Learning Apprenticeship (
- Shayna Hume and a team of fellow students are trying out life on Mars through a unique Earth-based experience. An aerospace engineering PhD student at the 91É«°É, Hume recently returned from a two-week stay at the Mars
- Twice a day, at dusk and just before dawn, a faint layer of sodium and other metals begins sinking down through the atmosphere, about 90 miles high above the city of 91É«°É, Colorado. The movement was captured by one of the world’s most sensitive