Shelly Miller News
- A group of international experts, including CU Â鶹ӰԺ’s Jose-Luis Jimenez, CIRES Fellow and distinguished chemistry professor, and Shelly Miller, mechanical engineering professor, presented a blueprint for national indoor quality standards for
- Professor Shelly L. Miller is a problem solver and an air pollution engineer. She finds reward and value when solving issues with immediate benefits, such as improved public health. Doing her work through a community partnership model is a match
- When Shelly Miller was growing up in southern California in the 1980s, there were days when poor air quality from smog would prevent her from going to school – or even going outside at all.“What I find interesting is that there are more sources
- Shelly Miller has received the 2022 Faculty Research Award from the College of Engineering and Applied Science.The honor, which is bestowed annually, recognizes achievements by a faculty member who has made outstanding contributions to the
- Put people in poorly ventilated rooms, where coronavirus-containing aerosols are trapped in the air with nowhere to go, and their risk of getting COVID-19 skyrockets. Research has shown that you can decrease the risk by ventilating the room and
- The challenges of wildfires, industrial pollution and vehicle emissions have centered the issue of outdoor air quality in the public consciousness.With the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic and the realization that the pathogen primarily transmits
- Shelly L. Miller is a professor of Mechanical Engineering and faculty in the Environmental Engineering Program.Miller received her master’s degree and doctorate in Civil and Environmental Engineering from the University of California, Berkeley
- Shelly Miller is interviewed in "Indoor Air Pollution in the Time of Coronavirus", a new long-format piece by Eos, the journal of the American Geophysical Union.Miller is a professor of mechanical and environmental engineering at the University of
- CU Â鶹ӰԺ’s Alumni Awards are recognizing a team of faculty and staff for their efforts on the COVID 19 pandemic.Environmental engineering faculty members Cresten Mansfeldt and Shelly Miller are among a group of employees collectively referred to
- As the COVID-19 pandemic swept the globe in 2020, musicians around the world were desperate for the answers to two pressing questions: Can playing musical instruments transmit COVID-19? And if so, what can be done? Now, halfway through 2021,