Through
4/26
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Penn In the News
Shu Yang of the School of Engineering and Applied Science and colleagues have developed a wooden seed carrier that can improve the germination rates of aerial seeding in areas that are difficult to access.
Penn In the News
Shu Yang of the School of Engineering and Applied Science and colleagues have developed a wooden seed carrier that can improve the germination rates of aerial seeding in areas that are difficult to access.
Penn In the News
PIK Professor Ezekiel J. Emanuel, Dean Erika H. James of the Wharton School, and Dean Vijay Kumar of the School of Engineering and Applied Science are quoted on the forum to support India's exceptional growth and specific health care needs.
Penn In the News
The Franklin Institute is honoring Nader Engheta of the School of Engineering and Applied Science for inventing new composite “metamaterials” that could be used to make ultrafast computers of the future.
Penn In the News
Mark Miskin of the School of Engineering and Applied Science is using tools from the semiconductor industry to develop nanotechnologies for microscopic robots.
Penn In the News
Naveen Albert, a fourth-year in the School of Engineering and Applied Science, has co-founded PhilTel, a free-to-use public wifi payphone project in Philadelphia.
Penn In the News
In the culminating project of Penn’s Robotics Art Residency, three artists hosted at the Pennovation Center developed collaborative exhibits with Ph.D. students at the GRASP Lab of the School of Engineering and Applied Science and the Weitzman School of Design.
Penn In the News
Dani Bassett of the School of Engineering and Applied Science discusses their new book on curiosity and intellectual humility, “Curious Minds,” co-authored with twin Perry Zurn.
Penn In the News
Norman Badler of the School of Engineering and Applied Science says that the crowd crush in Itaewon was densely packed, with no way for people to exit vertically.
Penn In the News
Norman Badler of the School of Engineering and Applied Science explains how high density crowd surges restrict movement and become dangerous.