Support from the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation will allow scientists to open windows into complex soft and biological materials.
College of Engineering News
The new microscopy facility will enable the high-resolution imaging of soft and biological material such as proteins.
Dec 14, 2021
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.
Spencer Smith in the lab with the groundbreaking Diesel2p.
Nov 22, 2021
The new device from Spencer LaVere Smith's laboratory has unprecedented capability for observing neural activity.
Artist depiction of a cell membrane (Katerynakon)
Nov 01, 2021
Nina Miolane receives prestigious NIH R01 grant to better understand membrane proteins through geometric deep learning.
All-inorganic perovskites compare well with their hybrid counterparts in terms of efficiency. Illustration by Xie Zhang
Oct 14, 2021
New research demonstrates great promise of all-inorganic perovskite solar cells for improving the efficiencies of solar cells.
Mechanical engineering professor Megan Valentine.
Oct 06, 2021
Five universities team up to program biological cells to design futuristic materials.
Assistant professors Galan Moody (left) and Yufei Ding
Sep 24, 2021
Two UCSB scientists receive award to partner with Cisco's new Quantum Research Team.
(Pictured clockwise from top left) Jonathan Balkind, Kerem Camsari, Luke Theogarajan, David Weld, Carl Meinhart, Sumita Pennathur
Sep 23, 2021
The Institute for Energy Efficiency awards seed funding for projects that seek high-impact solutions for energy efficiency.
Nelson Phillips, professor of technolgy management
Sep 16, 2021
The new technology management professor researches how humans organize and particularly how people and technology come together in organizations.
Sample application scenarios for counting a stationary crowd
Sep 14, 2021
Researchers' new method enables WiFi signals to count a stationary seated crowd, using their natural body fidgets.
Nina Miolane, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering
Sep 09, 2021
The new assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering uses innovative methods to mine biomedical imaging datasets.
Illustration by Erik Zumalt, Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin
Sep 08, 2021
Extracting lithium remains a challenging and inefficient process, but an interdisciplinary team has developed a way to extract lithium from contaminated water.
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