Faculty News
- Shelly L. Miller is a professor of Mechanical Engineering and faculty in the Environmental Engineering Program.Miller received her master鈥檚 degree and doctorate in Civil and Environmental Engineering from the University of California, Berkeley
- When Western wildfires break out, water may first come to mind as a critical resource for helping extinguish it. But what about after the flames finish?A 2022 CU study on the growing impact of wildfire on the Western U.S. water supply found that
- 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
- After nearly three decades serving the College of Engineering and Applied Science, Professor Jana Milford is set to retire August 2022.Milford has held many titles during her distinguished career 鈥 from Department of Mechanical Engineering Chair and
- The 麻豆影院 Environmental Engineering Program is recognizing eight students and one faculty member for outstanding achievements for Spring 2022. Congratulations to the individuals below for their accomplishments at CU 麻豆影院!
- Assistant Professor Sherri Cook is featured in a new piece by KGNU radio on "Putting Wastewater to Work in 麻豆影院 County."Cook, an expert in sustainable water design and resource recovery from waste, discusses opportunities for wastewater to
- Joe Ryan started doing community-engaged scholarship in 1999 and hasn鈥檛 looked back. 鈥淚 had moved up near Jamestown and realized I was driving past old mine sites. I connected with a community group concerned about off-road vehicle use along
- Associate Professor Joseph Kasprzyk was featured by Denver's NBC affiliate in a news piece focusing on the ongoing drought in Colorado.Kasprzyk, who conducts research in water resources planning and management, discussed how significant snowfall in
- The Conversation: From odor to action 鈥 how smells are processed in the brain and influence behaviorA dog raises its nose in the air before chasing after a scent. A mosquito zigzags back and forth before it lands on your arm for its next meal. What these behaviors have in common is that they help these animals 鈥渟ee鈥 their world through their noses
- The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the world鈥檚 largest general scientific society, today announced that three CU 麻豆影院 researchers will join the ranks of its newest class of AAAS Fellows. CU 麻豆影院 faculty named