Science & Technology
- Three CU Boulder researchers have joined a newly funded project to develop secure quantum networks.
- Colorado is at the forefront of the AI revolution, adopting applications across industries and leading with the Colorado Artificial Intelligence Act. This topic was a spotlight at the 60th annual Colorado Business Economic Outlook Forum.
- CU Boulder anthropology doctoral candidate Sabrina Bradford has been learning what’s on the menu for grizzlies in Montana.
- Computer science professor Nikolaus Correll, and his lab, has been awarded $1.8 million to research autonomous electric vehicle battery disassembly. The funding comes from the U.S. Department of Energy Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy.
- Learn how a team of CU doctoral students produced the first chromosome-level reference genome for humpback whales.
- CU Boulder researchers have demonstrated how gaps in taxonomical knowledge hinder conservation efforts.
- CU Boulder researchers use a unique, noninvasive method to determine the environmental factors contributing to several symptoms among tropical fish.
- Colorado has big quantum chops, but is the workforce ready? A new quantum workforce roadmap led by CU Boulder lays out a bold and inclusive plan for Colorado and the Mountain West.
- Quantum physicists at CU Boulder and the National Institute of Standards and Technology are paving the way for new kinds of optical atomic clocks, devices that track the passage of time by measuring the natural “ticking” of atoms.
- Two longtime friends, CU Boulder’s Abbie Liel and Notre Dame’s Susan Ostermann, are leading a study on resilient housing in disaster-prone areas including Maui, Alaska and Puerto Rico. Their research combines Liel’s expertise in structural engineering with Ostermann’s background in political science and law.