Duke University Alum Creates New Scanner To Help TSA Find Explosives
Using technology he developed as a research professor at Duke, Joel Greenberg is trying to roll out a new X-ray scanner that will help the TSA at airports.
Using technology he developed as a research professor at Duke, Joel Greenberg is trying to roll out a new X-ray scanner that will help the TSA at airports.
Jimmie Lenz shares his experience and insights into the swiftly growing field of fintech engineering.
Physicist David Smith speaks about the real-world science of invisibility.
Charles Gersbach weighs in on the challenge of manufacturing gene therapies at large scales.
Christopher Monroe argues that being too stringent in limiting the work of foreign students and scientists — even Chinese ones — poses as much of a national security threat as being too lax.
Robots that perceive their environment through video cameras are common nowadays, but SonicSense is a robot that uses sound to perceive and evaluate items.
Andrew Jones talks about his research on biofilms and the connections it has with math, biology, medicine, and everyday life.
Boyuan Chen is developing an open-source platform to automate walking robot design and production using AI and 3D printers.
Both students in Pratt and the Trinity College of Arts & Sciences can complete the new software engineering minor beginning in the fall.
Charles Gersbach addressed leaders of the FDA in a roundtable with other leaders from the world of cell and gene therapy, discussing the potential of genome and epigenome editing.
Duke Engineering alumnus and artist Mikael Owunna, Class of 2012, participates in an image essay and commentary, noting in "Blackness lies a sacred space where we can imagine futures rooted in love and dignity."
A research team from Duke University has created a framework called WildFusion, equipping a four-legged robot with the additional senses of vibration and touch, enabling it to build richer maps and choose safer footholds in real forests.