Ƶ Technology and Discovery News

  • A group of engineers stands behind their mechanical invention
    Ƶ Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science—A team of engineers and material scientists in the Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering at Ƶ Boulder has developed a new technology to turn thermal radiation into electricity in a way that literally teases the basic law of thermal physics.
  • A woman in a lab holds up a beaker with a jelly fish inside it
    FY 2023-24 was another tremendous year for innovation and entrepreneurship at the Ƶ. University researchers, inventors and creators began working with Venture Partners at Ƶ Boulder to advance 144 breakthrough innovations, and 36 Ƶ startups were launched through Venture Partners based on campus discoveries.
  • A pair of toddler's hands plant a leafy plant in rich soil
    New Ƶ Boulder research suggests a surprising tool that could help with weight loss: Exposure to beneficial bacteria. With assistance from Venture Partners, a new startup Kioga will pursue new microbe-based ingredients for preventing weight gain and promoting health.
  • Colorado
    Colorado Bioscience Association—Colorado's life sciences ecosystem raised $1.47 billion in 2023, demonstrating the resilience of life sciences companies and organizations in the state during a challenging year for U.S. life sciences fundraising.
  • wind turbines
    Renewable and Sustainable Energy Institute—Model Predictive Control (MPC) is an established control technique that is popular in the general control systems community. The MPC approach could have significant impacts on how wind turbines are controlled, not only improving their efficiency, but also reducing structural stress on the turbines and extending their lifetimes.
  • A schematic of the deposition process, as thorium ions get vaporized then deposited in a thin film on the substrate's surface
    EurekAlert!—Reported recently in a new study published in Nature, a team of researchers, led by JILA and NIST Fellow and University of Colorado Boulder Physics professor Jun Ye, in collaboration with Professor Eric Hudson’s team at UCLA’s Department of Physics and Astronomy, have found a way to make nuclear clocks a thousand times less radioactive and more cost-effective, thanks to a method creating thin films of thorium tetrafluoride.
  • A man and two women work together at a lab work table.
    Ƶ Boulder Today—The U.S. National Science Foundation has named Ƶ Boulder a collaborator on newly announced pilot projects supported by the National Quantum Virtual Laboratory (NQVL) initiative. This groundbreaking effort seeks to accelerate the development of quantum technologies and make cutting-edge quantum tools accessible to researchers nationwide. To do this, the NSF has funded 11 pilot projects (with six announced Dec. 16) to overcome the current engineering challenges facing the development of quantum devices.
  • A woman in a lab coat and blue gloves works at a laboratory computer
    Ƶ Boulder Today—Why does the COVID-19 virus make some people sicker than others? A new Ƶ Boulder study, published in the journal Cell, sheds light on the subject by identifying what the authors describe as an “immune system tuning dial,” which originated as a bug in the genetic code tens of millions of years ago.
  • Leslie Leinwand in her laboratory
    The Colorado Sun—Professor Leslie Leinwand (BioFrontiers Institute) and her lab want to know how python hearts grow and shrink so fast—and whether that could lead to treatments for humans
  • A diverse group of peoples stands together with five giant prize checks
    Ƶ Boulder College of Engineering & Applied Science—The College of Engineering and Applied Science continues to establish itself as a leader in innovation, with 22 startups emerging from its research labs in the past fiscal year. This achievement reflects the college's commitment to translating transformative research into solutions that address real-world challenges.
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