Engineers describe how fluid suspensions exhibit different behaviors at different scales.
College of Engineering News
The fine sugar crystals suspended in manuka honey lend it a thicker quality than a more filtered honey.
Apr 07, 2022
Eleven students affiliated with the College of Engineering received graduate research fellowships from the National Science Foundation.
Apr 04, 2022
The prestigious fellowships provide each recipient with $138,000 in financial support over three years.
Koki Narimoto's "Kazoku"
Mar 28, 2022
Electrical and computer engineering students to present a video game open house to demonstrate their software skills.
A projected 1 Gbit probabilistic computer based on nanodevices, which can solve probabilistic algorithms much more efficiently than classical computers.
Feb 08, 2022
Kerem Camsari receives a highly competitive junior-faculty award from the Office of Naval Research to build a probabilistic computer.
(Clockwise from top left) Aesha Parekh, Sanjay Chandrasekaran, Sharon Levy, Gyuwan Kim, Shlomi Steinberg, Samhita Honnavalli, and Yuke Wang
Feb 03, 2022
Students at all levels earn national honors for their research efforts.
UCSB continues to implement safety measures including masking to minimize the spread of COVID-19.
Jan 26, 2022
Modeling studies reflect UCSB’s success in fending off classroom transmission of COVID.
William Wang, the Mellichamp Chair in Artificial Intelligence and Designs
Jan 24, 2022
William Wang’s lecture on artificial intelligence launches UCSB Reads 2022.
John Harter, assistant professor of materials
Jan 18, 2022
Supported by an NSF Early CAREER award, John Harter's research could have far-reaching consequences for quantum technology development.
Raphaële Clément, assistant professor of materials
Jan 12, 2022
A recipient of the NSF's Early CAREER award, Raphaële Clément will investigate new materials for sodium-ion batteries.
Angela Pitenis, assistant professor of materials
Jan 10, 2022
Materials assistant professor Angela Pitenis receives an NSF Early CAREER award to study friction between soft materials.
The new microscopy facility will enable the high-resolution imaging of soft and biological material such as proteins.
Dec 14, 2021
Support from the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation will allow scientists to open windows into complex soft and biological materials.
A still image from the video, showing (from left) one steel rod (top) pulling away from the other, causing the liquid to stretch and form filaments, which eventually break into droplets.
Dec 02, 2021
The work captures the fluid dance of liquids as they stretch, break, and atomize.
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