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You searched: The ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ Robotics Club came home with best design honors after competing at the Vex Robotics World Championship in Dallas May 9-11.
VEX competitions make up the largest and fastest growing robotics engineering platform in the world with divisions for elementary and middle schools, middle and high schools and VEX U for colleges and universities. This year’s Vex U game involved placing rings onto various stakes — some stationary and others mounted on mobile goals that could be moved to corner zones to either double the team’s points or result in negative scoring,
In addition to winning the design award, the ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ entry placed 13th out of 54 teams in the math division, one of two divisions in the Vex U competition.
How ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ's Animal Disease Research and Diagnostic Laboratory plays a critical role in keeping South Dakota's food supply safe.
AeroFly — a Brookings-based aerospace company bred from ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ research — is working to bring humanity closer to Mars.
When the speed of sound isn’t fast enough, there is hypersonic travel — speeds five times the speed of sound. Doing so is quite possible. Engines have been designed to do so for at least a decade.
But for those engines to operate optimally, there’s a world of physics challenges. That’s where Jeffrey Doom, an associate professor in the mechanical engineering department at ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ, comes in. This summer he will make his fourth trip to the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, to undertake simulations and observe physical experiments.
A heavy-duty cart designed to transport heavy loads in deep underground mine tunnels was the top project presented at the April 22 Engineering Expo at Raven Precision Agricultural Center.
The transporter was built by ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ mechanical engineering students Braden Hanson, Luke Degen, Haley Evenson, Alli Krantz, Phil Baker and Tyson Boeve on behalf of the Sanford Underground Research Facility, the former Homestake gold mine in Lead that now is a physics research facility.
Three student teams from ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ have advanced to the finals of two different NASA contests in the coming weeks. All are mechanical engineering students.
The Gateways to Blue Skies competition advanced eight teams to Armstrong Flight Research Center in Palmdale, California, May 20-21.
Both of SDSU’s entries in the Revolutionary Aerospace Systems Concept-Academic Linkage contest were selected for the finals of the small lunar servicing and maintenance robot division in Cocoa Beach, Florida, June 2-4.
A total of 14 teams were selected in three divisions.
Haley Evenson received the 2025 Schutlz-Werth Award for her research and was recognized at SDSU's Undergraduate Research, Scholarship and Creative Active Day award's ceremony on April 16.
ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ Endowed Alfred Chair associate professor in dairy manufacturing Maneesha Mohan is utilizing nanosized bubbles to improve the efficiency of dairy wastewater treatment.
A Brookings-based animal health company, Medgene, is leading a revolution in the development of veterinary vaccines that is turning the tide in the endless battle against animal disease.
While living in his hometown in Nigeria, Africa, John Akujobi recalls a tragic construction accident in which a bricklayer backing up a wheelbarrow didn’t realize his proximity to the edge of a four story scaffold and fell to his death. The incident stuck with him.
As he progressed in his computer science studies and through conversations with his friends at ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ, Akujobi discovered the power of sensors, algorithms and machine learning. He realized those things hold the potential for preventing such future tragedies.
His solution, a wearable safety system named AMBER – Affordable Multimodal Sensor-Based Environmental Risk Detector designed to alert workers in real-time of environmental hazards in their blind spots.