Room-size charging system powers lights, phones, laptops without wires
The post Will power cords go the way of land lines? appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
Room-size charging system powers lights, phones, laptops without wires
The post Will power cords go the way of land lines? appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
Students say Ulaby, a member of the National Academy of Engineering and recipient of the Edison Medal, is one of the best professors – and people – they’ve ever known.
In an op-ed Brian Denton and co-author Elena Gerstmann say that while the STEM workforce is growing rapidly, many groups are underrepresented.
The post Opinion: The lack of diversity in engineering is like a disease (but there is a cure) appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
Highlights include Wired and Popular Science.
The post In the news: Michigan Engineering experts August 23-27 appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
He changed the chemical engineering profession as a researcher, scholar, author, and, most importantly, a skilled and accomplished educator.
The post Remembering H. Scott Fogler, 1939-2021 appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
Highlights include Inside Higher Ed and The Washington Post.
The post In the news: Michigan Engineering experts August 16-20 appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
Baris Kasikci plans to improve software fuzzers by learning how deployed software is most commonly run by users.
Understanding how to design better catalysts could enable sustainable energy tech and make everyday chemicals more environmentally friendly.
The post Machine learning links material composition and performance in catalysts appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
U-M Aerospace Engineering Professor Venkat Raman advocates for more versatile and powerful modeling tools to meet computational demands of next-generation aircraft design.
The post Opinion: Future aerospace enterprises will demand more advanced modeling and simulation appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.
Prof. Elaheh Ahmadi is working to design a new kind of semiconductor that can provide high power at high frequencies