A highly accurate, low-cost alternative to an expensive conductivity probe opens up teaching and learning opportunities.
College of Engineering News
Living vine robot project
Jul 21, 2017
Mechanical engineers develop a robot that can navigate its environment by extending its reach.
Karen Scida, postdoctoral researcher and winner of Otis Williams Postdoctoral Fellowship
Jul 18, 2017
Karen Scida, postdoctoral researcher in Professor Sumita Pennathur's lab, wins Otis Williams Fellowship for developing a novel approach to insulin delivery.
Natural Language Processing at UCSB
Jul 10, 2017
UCSB computer scientist William Wang employs natural language processing to make human-computer communication as seamless as possible.
Materials professor and department chair, Michael Chbinyc
Jun 27, 2017
Professor Michael Chabinyc and his lab team seek to control the characteristics of conductive polymers, which may be important to energy efficiency.
Artist's interpretation of a charge density wave flowing through a lattice of doped strontium iridium oxide. Illustration by Peter Allen
Jun 22, 2017
Materials professor Stephen Wilson’s lab elicits promising behavior in a new material.
Michelle O'Malley
Jun 20, 2017
Michelle O'Malley is one of 13 young professors in U.S. to receive a 2017 Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award.
Yasamin Mostofi
Jun 19, 2017
Yasamin Mostofi's lab is first to deomonstrate using drones and WiFi to create 3D images by "seeing" through walls.
Jun 14, 2017
Saleh will receive €45,000 (about $50,700) to travel to Munich and carry out research in Munich.
Igor Mezić was honored for his long-term contributions by the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics.
Jun 02, 2017
Igor Mezić is honored for long-term contributions to applied mathematics; named co-PI of $6.5 million research project related to novel applications in autonomous devices.
Assistant Professor Michelle O'Malley
May 30, 2017
Novel structure of enzyme discovered by researchers in Michelle O'Malley's lab shows promise for sustainable fuel and medicines.
A light micrograph shows individuals of a Botryllus schlosseri colony that have arranged themselves into a star-shaped structure called a "system." A colony can consist of multiple systems, all connected by a large common external vasculature. Here, the vasculature can be seen extending out at the edge of the colony and terminating in sac-like appendages called ampullae. Photograph by Delany Rodriguez
May 16, 2017
An intercampus project linking UC campuses in Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, and Irvine will examine Botryllus schlosseri, seeking insights into the human vascular system.
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