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  1. Fighting the good fight

    Elsie MacGill shattered barriers as the world’s first female aeronautical engineer and played a pivotal role in streamlining aircraft production.

    The post Fighting the good fight appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.

  2. Helping students set a course

    A professor and his wife set up a scholarship based on their experiences with getting to know their students

    The post Helping students set a course appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.

  3. Laser-focused

    Franklin Dollar, a pioneer in laser plasma research, is not only unraveling cosmic mysteries but also promoting equity and inclusivity in science education and research

    The post Laser-focused appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.

  4. Advancing chips for the auto sector is the goal of new Michigan-based initiative

    U-Michigan joins industry, state, education partners to develop talent and technology.

  5. New sensation

    Not only can research participants control a prosthetic hand with their minds—now they can begin to “feel” it, too.

    The post New sensation appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.

  6. Bittersweet business

    Askanya Chocolates continues to churn out opportunity in an increasingly troubled Haiti.

    The post Bittersweet business appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.

  7. Peecycling

    Progress continues for upcycling urine as a safe agricultural fertilizer.

    The post Peecycling appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.

  8. Focused ambitions

    While hunger for an artificial intelligence that can think like a human remains unsated, AI continues to appear in our lives in smaller ways.

    The post Focused ambitions appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.

  9. Johanna Mathieu awarded 2023 IEEE PES Wanda Reder Pioneer in Power Award

    Mathieu is a national leader on research to reduce the environmental impact, cost, and inefficiency of electric power systems.

  10. AI could run a million microbial experiments per year

    Automation uncovers combinations of amino acids that feed two bacterial species and could tell us much more about the 90% of bacteria that humans have hardly studied.

    The post AI could run a million microbial experiments per year appeared first on Michigan Engineering News.