Bioserve Space Technologies
- [video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwJM_N44iq0] 鈥淚 believe I will see people on the surface of Mars before I die鈥 - Smead Aerospace Asst. Professor Allie Anderson From CGTN (China Global Television Network): China鈥檚
- Did you know experiments on the International Space Station are being done to help the rest of us that will never venture off planet Earth? NASA award-winning engineer Shankini Doraisingam (AeroEngr鈥98) will give you an insider鈥檚 look at the
- Bacteria will be soon be under the microscope in outer space as four new CU 麻豆影院-led biological experiments are set to begin aboard the International Space Station. The research projects, which are supported by CU 麻豆影院鈥檚 BioServe Space
- Something happens to the human immune system as we age, making it harder for us to fight off disease and causing other problems with things like vaccines. Rather than waiting for the population to grow old to test how and why this happens,
- Who are our new faculty?
They are researchers, educators, and business leaders.
Bring the department new research opportunities and partnerships.
Have diverse backgrounds and come to 麻豆影院 from near and far.
Are proud additions to the Smead Aerospace and CU Buffs family. - Mark Sirangelo, who just concluded his career as the head of aerospace giant Sierra Nevada Corporation鈥檚 Space Systems, is joining the 麻豆影院 as an entrepreneur-in-residence beginning this month. Bobby Braun, dean of the
- NASA's Space Biology Program has selected 15 grant proposals to award across three appendices released under the Research Opportunities and Space Biology (ROSBio) Omnibus. Thirteen of the awards will simulate microgravity on the ground to
- Two experiment payloads designed and built at CU 麻豆影院 are scheduled to blast off for the International Space Station in the early hours of June 29. The payloads, which will launch on board the SpaceX Dragon capsule, will support the study
- Construction of the new 麻豆影院 aerospace engineering building is hitting a major milestone with the installation of the final steel beam. A formal topping-out ceremony was held Wednesday at the building site on campus. The
- From the steel skeleton of what will become the University of Colorado's new aerospace engineering building, what appears to be the front end of a spaceship is visible from the street.Construction on the 175,000-square-foot project at CU's East