Search All News
When a University of Alabama football player with an injured arm instinctively stiff-armed a defender in the 2015 Southeastern Conference Championship Game, he was able to do so thanks to doctors, athletic trainers, engineering students, professors and a 3-D printer.
Author: Associated Engineering Press / Published: February 13, 2017 / Posted in: Electrical and Computer Engineering, Integrative Center for Athletic and Sport Technology, Mechanical Engineering, Research, Students, UA News / Features: Dr. Tim A. Haskew
Birmingham-based r360 Consulting has entered into a three-year agreement with the City of Northport. According to the firm, Northport will pay r360 $25,000 per year to collect economic data and…
Source: ABC 33/40 / Published: February 10, 2017 / Posted in: Center for Advanced Public Safety, Faculty and Staff, In The News, Research
Environmentalists, start your engines? When you think about the Camaro, the term “muscle car” comes to mind… A team at the University of Alabama has lept forward in the process. This…
Source: ASME / Published: February 8, 2017 / Posted in: Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics, Electrical and Computer Engineering, In The News, Mechanical Engineering, Students / Features: Dr. Hwan-Sik Yoon, Dr. Paulius V. Puzinauskas, Dr. Tim A. Haskew
More than 600 students are expected to participate in the 2017 Regional Science Olympiad competition at The University of Alabama Saturday, Feb. 18.
Author: Associated Engineering Press / Published: February 8, 2017 / Posted in: Engineering, UA News
The University of Alabama’s Women in STEM initiaitve hosts its fifth annual WiSE symposium March 3-4.
Author: Associated Engineering Press / Published: February 3, 2017 / Posted in: Outreach, UA News
A global group of experts that devise standards for additive manufacturing, or 3-D printing, will meet at The University of Alabama.
Author: Associated Engineering Press / Published: January 26, 2017 / Posted in: Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics, Mechanical Engineering, Metallurgical and Materials Engineering, Outreach, Research, UA News / Features: Dr. Steve Daniewicz
This spring 13 engineering students at The University of Alabama are learning automotive engineering through a class taught entirely in German, most likely the first German-taught engineering course for American students in the Southeast.
Author: Associated Engineering Press / Published: January 23, 2017 / Posted in: Center for Advanced Vehicle Technologies, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Students, UA News / Features: Dr. Bharat Balasubramanian
Twenty five percent more people died in car wrecks statewide in 2016 compared to the year before, according to traffic data released Tuesday by the University of Alabama’s Center for…
Source: The Anniston Star / Published: January 18, 2017 / Posted in: Center for Advanced Public Safety, In The News, Research / Features: Dr. David Brown
Where are you from? Tuscaloosa, Alabama What company/institution do you work for? The University of Alabama Where did you complete your chemical engineering education? The University of Alabama How many…
Source: ChEnected / Published: January 18, 2017 / Posted in: Chemical and Biological Engineering, In The News, Students
Deaths from the state’s traffic crashes in 2016 increased by nearly a quarter from 2015, while total crashes increased by only 2 percent, according to a recent study of data by researchers at The University of Alabama Center for Advanced Public Safety.
Author: Associated Engineering Press / Published: January 17, 2017 / Posted in: Center for Advanced Public Safety, Research, UA News
In 1837, The University of Alabama became one of the first five universities in the nation to offer engineering classes. Today, UA’s College of Engineering has more than 5,800 students and more than 150 faculty. In recent years, students in the College have been named USA Today All-USA College Academic Team members, Goldwater, Hollings, Portz, Boren, Mitchell and Truman scholars.