Georgia Tech's College of Engineering consistently produces articles, content, and videos highlighting our students, staff, faculty, and research. This includes stories about artificial intelligence, robots, engineering systems, space exploration and rockets, medical advances, and more.
Georgia Tech Joins Apple’s New Silicon Initiative
Electrical and computer engineering students will benefit from expanded microelectronic circuits and hardware design curriculum and have access to Apple engineers to better prepare for a career in hardware engineering.
Pinar Keskinocak Named Chair of H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering
Distinguished ISyE professor will lead the nation’s No. 1 industrial engineering program.
Charting a New Course: Veteran Michael Bauby’s Journey to Georgia Tech
Drawn to a military career after high school, the civil engineering student found he was much more prepared for college after completing his service.
How Physical Force Affects Cancer Therapy Efficiency
Research team led by BME's Cheng Zhu probes the underlying mechanisms of PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor therapy.
Ocean Science and Engineering Students Take on Coral Cooling Challenge
At the invitation of the National Marine Sanctuary Foundation, a team of Ph.D. students designed an ocean-cooling system to help stop coral bleaching.
The Sherlock Holmes of AI
A new cybersecurity forensic tool from ECE's Brendan Saltaformaggio uses AI to recover the exact models a malware-compromised machine was running and discover where fatal errors occurred.
From BME to MLB: Dylan Pané Makes it to The Show
Alumnus reflects on his rookie season as a biomechanics engineer with the New York Mets.
Game-changing Visual Tools Help Students Grasp Quantum Mechanics
Backed by the National Science Foundation, an ECE project uses computer games and visualizations to help students understand challenging concepts of semiconductor and microelectronic physics.
Jayaraman Appointed Chair of National Academies Committee on PPE
MSE's Sundaresan Jayaraman is the first non-physician to lead the standing committee that advises on scientific and technical development, certification, and deployment of personal protective equipment for workplace safety.
Improving the Odds for Patients with Atrial Fibrillation
BME researcher Yue Chen is using an NSF CAREER Award to develop an MRI-safe surgical robot.
Bridge to Employment Program Shows Students How STEM Can Shape Their Future
BTE is a partnership with Johnson & Johnson to offer high schoolers from underserved communities hands-on experience and mentorship in STEM fields, providing a pathway to college and beyond.
Prausnitz Elected to National Academy of Medicine
The chemical engineer, microneedle pioneer, and entrepreneur is the fourth College of Engineering faculty member to join the Academy since 2020.
New Tool Improves Diagnosis of Common Tropical Disease
BME researchers are using AI to diagnose schistosomiasis before the parasites causing it hatch in the blood, catching hidden information that signals early stage infections.
Unlocking Brain Plasticity
When people lose vision, does their hearing get stronger? With an NSF CAREER award, BME's Ming-fai Fong is studying the brain's ability to adapt and learn to try to find out.
Wings of Hope
AE alumnus Gary Weissel joins fleet of pilots to deliver supplies to Hurricane Helene victims.
Far More Critical Infrastructure Systems are Vulnerable to Attack Than Operators Realize
With a new algorithm, ECE researchers more accurately identified devices unknowingly connected to the internet and vulnerable to remote cyberattacks.
Anuj Mehrotra's Journey from ISyE Student to Business School Dean
For Mehrotra, Tech Square Phase 3 represents the culmination of his educational journey from a student in the Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering to dean of the Scheller College of Business.
Fedorov Developing New Instrumentation for Biomedical Research with $4.8M from NIH
ME's Andrei Federov will work with collaborators in ChBE and at Emory on two projects to speed cell modification processes and better detect brain temperature.
New Smart Charger May Pave the Way for More EVs
The automated system allows for cheaper, carbon-free charging and aims to reduce the burden on the power grid as more electric vehicles enter the roadway.
Unlocking the Brain: Using Microbubbles and Ultrasound for Drug Delivery
A new study from Costas Arvanitis' lab offers new insight on opening a pathway for therapies to penetrate the blood-brain barrier while minimizing potential complications from inflammation.
Pagination
- Previous page
- Current page 6
- Next page