Hiding in plain light
Electric car manufacturer Tesla and solar company SolarCity have reinvented the solar panel, eschewing traditional aesthetics in favor of something best described as suburban camouflage.
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Electric car manufacturer Tesla and solar company SolarCity have reinvented the solar panel, eschewing traditional aesthetics in favor of something best described as suburban camouflage.
For those who are suffering from a case of post-election blues, a reminder of ASU's scientific achievement over the years might bring some much needed R and R. Below, in no particular order, are three of the most influential research studies to come out of Sparky's fine institution.
In the face of gleaming new gadgets and groundbreaking data, sometimes social issues in the technological community seem to be afterthoughts. However, the scientific industry is shaped by those who participate in it, and a new study says some groups are underrepresented.
The ASU Citizen Science Maker Summit was hosted at the Chandler Innovation Center.
Last night, an ASU scientific organization bridged the gap between the scientific and home-grown development communities in pursuit of a rare piece of collaboration in the disparate tech community.
Traditionally, the best way to integrate solar technology with the surrounding architecture has been to use it as shade — anyone who has dipped and ducked their way through the crowds on Cady Mall only has to look up to verify this.
In a building with a striking resemblance to a shipping container lies one of ASU's least known resources: TechShop, a cooperative workspace that houses a vast array of machining and engineering equipment that is absolutely free for ASU students to use.
Emily Herring, a student-worker at the Decision Theater, walks past display screens on Sept. 23, 2016.
Chances are, anyone who’s spent the better part of an hour wandering around Tempe has seen campus shuttles plastered with decals lauding ASU's achievements in innovation. Chances are, they don't have a real idea of how the University earned this award.
Delicacy doesn't come to mind when describing war, but when balancing military technology and ethical responsibility, meticulous planning is key.
Inventor Adrian Gillette demonstrates the "Rave Relay" app on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2016.
One of the functions of the Rave Relay app.
Tucked away in the far corner of Changemaker Central, a small studio in the Memorial Union dedicated to social change and entrepreneurship, Adrian Gillette stood surrounded by an audience of ASU students seated in office chairs.
In most circumstances, retiring at 25 would be quite early. For the Hubble Space Telescope, 25 is just in time to be replaced with new technology and usher in the beginning of a new era in space optics.
Siddhant Datta is pictured holding a metal test strip at the AIMS lab on Sept. 8, 2016.
Past the oscillating shadows of its large fans and the polarizing yellow-and-black-striped paint job, the ISTB2 building shelters one of ASU's most expensive pieces of equipment.
Students done letting that Xbox Kinect in the far corner of their dorm rooms collect dust might just want to donate it to a new research project at the Del E. Webb School of Construction.
Earlier this year, a reported 58,000 U.S. bridges — a little over 10 percent of the country's total — were found to be 'structurally deficient.'
Just two years after inking a deal with Spanish solar energy company AORA, ASU's Solar Tulip project has been cancelled.
The Arizona Science Center's Create lab is only on the cusp of its first birthday, but its founders believe it has already created a place for itself in the community.
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