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.
ME's Student's Tech Startup Gets Shot at Big Funding
Ready Route to Recycling Carbon Fiber-Reinforced Plastics
Monitoring Side-Channel Signals Could Detect Malicious Software on IoT Devices
ECE's Ayanna Howard Chosen for Invention Ambassadors Program
ECE's Magnus Egerstedt Named New Executive Director of the Institute for Robotics and Intelligent Machines
Summer Engineering Programs Come to Close
The Netflix of Fitness
AE School Chair Recognized by AIAA and Academia Sinica
Civil Engineering Student Aaron Bivins wins EPA fellowship to study water quality in rural Alabama
Researchers Work to Avoid Potholes and Pitfalls on the Road to Autonomous Vehicles
Millennials: They're Not Game-Changers After All, Study Finds
New Associate Dean Named in College of Engineering
2016 CoE Staff Appreciation
AE Professor, Robert Braun, Accepts Dean Post at University of Colorado Boulder
On the field: MONEYPUCK
Alexandra Mandrycky, IE 13, is helping the NHL’s Minnesota Wild put analytics to work on the ice.
Alexandra Mandrycky, IE 13, is helping the NHL’s Minnesota Wild put analytics to work on the ice.
Nanoparticles deliver anticancer cluster bombs
Engineered “Sand” May Help Cool Electronic Devices
Robot Earns its Shoes, Walks Like a Person
Aaron Ames, professor in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering and School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, has produced what they say is the most efficient-walking humanoid ever created.
Aaron Ames, professor in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering and School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, has produced what they say is the most efficient-walking humanoid ever created.
Answering the Call for Mastery
Specialized graduate programs demonstrate CoE’s agility in responding to industry needs.
Specialized graduate programs demonstrate CoE’s agility in responding to industry needs.
BME's Cassie Mitchell Named to the Rio 2016 Paralympic Team
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