

Undergraduate Engineering Program Ranked 4th by U.S.News

Not where we are, but where we’re going — whether it’s here on the ground or millions of miles away. Georgia Tech engineers are shaping the rapidly shifting future of how we’ll fly people and stuff. Our engineers are helping get humans to the moon and, eventually, Mars, while creating the tools to help us unravel some of our solar system’s deepest mysteries. The sky is no limit in the Georgia Tech College of Engineering. Take off with us into The Aerospace Issue.

In a world with more people, more energy needs, and more waste than ever, Georgia Tech engineers are hard at work developing the tools and technology for everyone to thrive. We’re diverting trash from landfills and taming plastic pollution (while finding alternatives to plastic in the first place). We're reducing the environmental impact of agriculture and finding new ways to fertilize the fields growing food for a growing world. And engineers are powering up the batteries, fuels, and renewable sources to meet surging energy demand. The future is coming; we're making it more sustainable.

Georgia Tech engineers are using artificial intelligence to make roads and rivers safer, restore or boost human function, and enhance the practice of engineering. We’re building the technology and infrastructure to power tomorrow’s AI tools. And we’re giving our students the AI courses and supercomputing power they need to be ready. AI is changing our world, and Georgia Tech engineers are leading the way.

With the top biomedical engineering program in the country, it’s only fitting that our rebooted College magazine focuses on health and medicine in our return issue. From cancer to anemia, synthetic biology to eye disease, Georgia Tech engineers are improving medicine today and designing a healthier tomorrow for us all.