UCSB will work with Xanadu to co-create custom resources for students and develop training materials.
College of Engineering News
![](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/Moody_01.jpg?itok=gsgfnpt5&c=04ce19bbcbe37d26bea58710f60da84d)
Electrical and computer engineering professor Galan Moody (right) says UCSB students like Amalu Shimamura (left), a PhD student in his research group, will benefit greatly from the partnership.
Nov 29, 2023
![A nearly $10 million grant will allow UCSB researchers to embrace a trend in the pharmaceutical and biomedical industries: automation.](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/BioE_Automation.jpeg?itok=fTnVcyj_&c=4b91191ccfec1e847d287c4dd8e06bec)
A nearly $10 million grant will allow UCSB researchers to embrace a trend in the pharmaceutical and biomedical industries: automation.
Nov 08, 2023
A nearly $10 million grant enables acquisition of synthetic biology robotics systems needed to perform extremely precise research at unprecedented scales.
![Yangying Zhu, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at UC Santa Barbara](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/Zhu_Image.jpg?itok=8hVd3d8s)
Mechanical engineering assistant professor Yangying Zhu has received a Young Investigator Award from the Office of Naval Research.
Oct 24, 2023
Mechanical engineering assistant professor Yangying Zhu to investigate a promising cooling method for high-performance devices.
![UCSB's Computer Science Department launched a new program to help students from underrepresented communities navigate the PhD application process](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/computer-science.jpeg?itok=Hb6ymzx_)
UCSB's Computer Science Department launched a new program to help students from underrepresented communities navigate the PhD application process.
Oct 23, 2023
Student-led program will support students from underserved and marginalized communities.
![Kerem Çamsarı and his PhD student, Navid Anjum Aadit, received a Bronze Medal during the Bell Labs Prize Competition](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/BellLAbs.jpg?itok=emEZlDK3&c=daa2a901d5ca832f75f4352f44944aac)
Kerem Çamsarı (second from the left) and his PhD student, Navid Anjum Aadit (second from the right), received a Bronze Medal during the Bell Labs Prize Competition.
Oct 18, 2023
Çamsarı and Aadit received the Bronze Medal and a $25,000 prize for their project, “Probabilistic Computing with p-bits: From Concept to Supremacy.”
![Image of a micro-electronic circuit board](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/microelectronics-circuit-istock-uc-santa-barbara-small.jpeg?itok=LWMV1fLZ&c=07dfb74e08d975e9f5376d3ba04fd634)
Oct 18, 2023
UCSB joins a federally sponsored regional innovation hub to help bolster microelectronics technology.
![Assistant Professor Enoch Yeung](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/Enoch_Yeung_B-W_news.jpg?itok=uzv7vb6w&c=daa2a901d5ca832f75f4352f44944aac)
Assistant Professor Enoch Yeung's Early CAREER Award will allow him to further study how the phenomena of DNA supercoiling and writhing affect gene transcription. Photograph by Lilli McKinney
Oct 10, 2023
Enoch Yeung seeks to visualize gene transcription and surrounding patterns of DNA supercoiling
![Photo of Assistant Professor Nina Miolane and her research group.](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/Nina%20Miolane_Lab_group_CAREER_news.jpg?itok=pSW_08Rf&c=daa2a901d5ca832f75f4352f44944aac)
Assistant Professor Nina Miolane (third from left) and members of her research group (from left): Sophia Sanborn, Adele Myers, Francisco Acosta, Bongjin Koo, Mathilde Papillon. Photograph by Lilli McKinney
Oct 10, 2023
Nina Miolane develops geometric statistics and geometric deep learning for imaging sciences.
![Image of a test setup to illustrate wifi reading through walls](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/wifi%20through%20walls.jpeg?itok=Z7rVwZxb&c=44ac820e4e2f5a4f37f6da9dc142a2c1)
The setup in Mostofi lab used to demonstrate how wifi can be used to image still objects through a wall.
Sep 12, 2023
Yasamin Mostofi's lab develops a new technique to tackle a tough technological problem.
![Illustration showing an artist's conceptual rendering of a quantum magnetometer on a chip. Illustration by Brian Long](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/NSF_quantum_chip-scale_Brian_Long_news.jpg?itok=BlMz_wZF&c=daa2a901d5ca832f75f4352f44944aac)
Artist's conceptual rendering of a quantum magnetometer on a chip. Illustration by Brian Long
Aug 31, 2023
Collaborative grant aimed at making quantum technologies real.
![UC Santa Barbara chemical engineering major Jessy Gonzalez explains his summer research project during a poster session sponsored by the Center for Science and Engineering Partnerships (CSEP).](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/Jessy_01.jpg?itok=CU03NbOa&c=4b0b10049fca7350fa31dae408a719e3)
UC Santa Barbara chemical engineering major Jessy Gonzalez explains his summer research project during a poster session sponsored by the Center for Science and Engineering Partnerships (CSEP).
Aug 21, 2023
Dozens of undergraduate students presented their summer research projects and reflected on their academic and personal growth.
![A plastic detergent bottle could be turned into detergent.](https://engineering.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/styles/news_and_events_thumb_2x/public/images/news/detergent-bottle.jpeg?itok=ZqbiEYUV&c=409f92c98266ca241dddfa82532d4522)
The method can allow empty detergent bottles to be made into detergent.
Aug 16, 2023
UCSB chemical engineer Susannah Scott's method gives single-use plastics a second life.
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