Features
-
Engineering with a Mission
The engineering work being done today was the stuff of imagination when the School of Engineering started a century ago. Where do we go from here?
Fall 2012
-
We, robots
Adventures with the Robotics Systems Laboratory by land, sea, and sky. And in orbit.
Fall 2012
-
Sarah Kate Wilson vs. Godzilla
An engineering professor tackles big problems—like attracting more women to her field and transferring mountains of data through the air.
Fall 2012
-
Deluge and drought
Lessons in how to wedge data into smaller spaces. And build a smarter energy grid.
Fall 2012
-
Building biomedical tests
Where engineering meets biology, the work ranges from diagnosing voice disorders to tracking toxicity in the brain.
Fall 2012
-
The long view
Build it safer and stronger—sustainably.
Fall 2012
-
Drago's gold
From an Olympic water polo medal to designing systems for the rocket that put men on the Moon: the life and work of engineering professor Dragoslav Siljak.
Fall 2012
-
Wings
For a century, John J. Montgomery has been given short shrift when it comes to his role as an aviation pioneer. It's time to set things right.
Fall 2012
-
Can you stand the heat?
It took months of space flight for the Curiosity rover to reach Mars. And, to survive the heat of entry, it took a shield that a team led by Robin Beck ’77 designed.
Fall 2012
Fall 2012
Table of contents
Features
Engineering with a Mission
The engineering work being done today was the stuff of imagination when the School of Engineering started a century ago. Where do we go from here?
We, robots
Adventures with the Robotics Systems Laboratory by land, sea, and sky. And in orbit.
Can you stand the heat?
It took months of space flight for the Curiosity rover to reach Mars. And, to survive the heat of entry, it took a shield that a team led by Robin Beck ’77 designed.
Mission Matters
A grand new gateway
Step inside the Patricia A. and Stephen C. Schott Admission and Enrollment Services Building.
A rivalry like no other
It's only a game, right? Not if we're talking soccer and USA vs. Mexico.
Player of the year
Computer engineering major Katie Le ’14 becomes the first Bronco to battle in the NCAA women's singles tourney.

