NC State researchers have developed software that allows them to map unknown environments such as collapsed buildings. Edgar Lobaton, Alper Bozkurt and Alireza Dirafzoon, electrical and computer engineering, featured.
NC State researchers have developed software that allows them to map unknown environments ? such as collapsed buildings. Edgar Lobaton, Alper Bozkurt and Alireza Dirafzoon, electrical and computer engineering, featured.
NC State researchers are developing software to help map unknown and potentially dangerous environments by employing an army of insect cyborgs. Edgar Lobaton, Alper Bozkurt and Alireza Dirafzoon, electrical and computer engineering, featured.
NC State researchers have developed software that allows them to map unknown environments ? such as collapsed buildings. Edgar Lobaton, Alper Bozkurt and Alireza Dirafzoon, electrical and computer engineering, featured.
NC State researchers have developed software that allows them to map unknown environments ? such as collapsed buildings. Edgar Lobaton, Alper Bozkurt and Alireza Dirafzoon, electrical and computer engineering, featured.
NC State researchers have developed software that allows them to map unknown environments ? such as collapsed buildings. Edgar Lobaton, Alper Bozkurt and Alireza Dirafzoon, electrical and computer engineering, featured.
The NC State entrepreneurs behind ?Jar-with-a-Twist? is hoping for your vote in the ?Dream Big America? entrepreneurship contest.
NC State researchers have developed a liquid metal that could be used to print circuit components. John Muth, electrical and computer engineering, featured.
NC State professor hopes his remote-controlled cockroaches catch on ? not for entertainment, but as a way to save people in life-threatening situations. Alper Bozkurt, electrical and computer engineering, featured.
NC State researchers have come up with a new technique for improving the connections between stacked solar cells, which should improve the overall efficiency of solar energy devices and reduce the cost of solar energy production. Salah Bedair, electrical engineering,...
NC State researchers have developed a liquid metal that could be used to print circuit components. John Muth, uncredited.
Research published in 2006 by Ulf Leonhardt of Scotland?s University of St. Andrews, English physicist John Pendry, David Schurig of NC State University and David Smith of Duke University suggested that earlier invisibility theories were too simplified. David Schurig,...
During 2012, ABB Corporate Research, invited proposals from academic and research institutes around the world to support promising graduate students and senior researchers with projects that combine academic research with industrial application in the power and...
Kiwi start-up Footfalls & Heartbeats Limited (FHL) is working with NC State researchers on its revolutionary process for manufacturing intelligent textiles. NC State was selected as a research partner because it is home to one of the world?s leading smart textile...
A team of researchers is working on technology that would allow mobile devices to send and receive more data using the same limited amount of bandwidth. Brian Floyd, electrical engineering, featured.
NC State researchers have developed a way to print metal structures at room temperature. John Muth, uncredited.
NC State researchers have developed software that allows them to map unknown environments ? such as collapsed buildings. Edgar Lobaton, Alper Bozkurt and Alireza Dirafzoon, electrical and computer engineering, featured.
NC State researchers have devised a means of improving the connections between stacked solar cells ? one capable of increasing the overall efficiency of solar energy devices, while also reducing associated costs. Salah Bedair, electrical engineering, featured.
NC State researchers have developed a simple fix to increase the efficiency of stacked solar cells dramatically. Salah Bedair, electrical engineering, featured.
New technology at NC State can cut time to charge plug-in electric vehicles from four hours to just one hour. Ewan Pritchard, electrical and computer engineering, featured.