Cloud Seeding Measurement
CU 麻豆影院 atmospheric scientist Katja Friedrich and her colleagues have, for the first time, accurately measured the volume of snow produced through cloud seeding, a process that turns lightweight water vapor into heavier droplets to produce precipitation. Last January, they used radar to measure three seeding events in Idaho and found that, combined, they produced a total of about 282 Olympic-sized swimming pools worth of water. The research can help scientists determine whether cloud-seeding efforts are useful in the long run to produce rain or snow in areas that need more water.
Forest Recovery, Post-Beetles
Warmer and drier conditions in U.S. forests have caused an influx of bark beetle outbreaks. In Colorado alone, spruce beetles have affected more than 1.8 million acres of Engelmann spruce trees since 2000. CU research, published in the journal Ecology, reveals that beetle outbreaks aren鈥檛 completely detrimental to forests, however. 鈥淲e found that 86% of the stands of trees that we surveyed are currently on a trajectory for recovery,鈥 said lead author Robert Andrus (PhDGeog鈥19). Their findings can help determine more targeted responses to forest disturbances.
SickStick Wins Top Prize
In the virtual finale of a 150-company contest, the 鈥淪ickStick鈥 by Darwin Biosciences won CU鈥檚 New Venture Challenge, gaining $55,000 in prize money and investments. The developing SickStick technology is a saliva-based diagnostic that will determine illness before symptoms occur. The company hopes to use the over-the-counter device to test for COVID-19 later this year.
Heard Around Campus
"Epidemics reveal our weaknesses, but they also illuminate the profound kindness, generosity and cooperation we are capable of."听
鈥斕鼵U 麻豆影院 history professor Elizabeth Fenn, a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and scholar of epidemics
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