Polar bear on a glacier

Newly documented population of polar bearsĚýsheds light on species’ future

June 20, 2022

A new population of polar bears documented on the southeast coast of Greenland use glacier ice to survive, despite limited access to sea ice. This small, genetically distinct group of polar bears could be important to the future of the species in a warming world.

CU researcher demonstrating tech tattoos that change color in response to various signals

Learn about funding your startup, innovation at conference June 27–July 1

June 20, 2022

Hear from fellow researchers, grant award winners and others on how to best earn essential funding opportunities at this dynamic Venture Partners conference during Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer Week.

NHL Stanley Cup

In Stanley Cup final, an avalanche of demand sends ticket prices soaring

June 20, 2022

With the National Hockey League's playoffs in the final round, an analytics expert with the Leeds School of Business says teams’ box-office strategies are “leaving a lot of money on the table” for resellers.​

Emily Covert and other female athletes running

CU women finish 3rd in track, cross-country standings

June 20, 2022

The University of Colorado women's cross-country and track and field program finished third in the 2022 United States Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Program of the Year running.

small group of professors identifies challenges facing the business analytics master's programs they run at their schools

Data quality: Leeds wants to shape the conversation on improving business analytics

June 20, 2022

Experts from industry and academia came to Boulder for a conference, hosted by the Leeds School of Business, assessing the challenges facing business analytics.​

CU Museum of Natural History building

Jaelyn Eberle named interim director of CU Museum of Natural History

June 17, 2022

Eberle will begin serving as interim director of the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History effective July 1. She has been with the museum for 20 years, including a previous stint as interim director.

Chancellor Philip DiStefano

CU Boulder leaders visit Vail Valley

June 16, 2022

Chancellor Philip DiStefano, Athletic Director Rick George and faculty leaders visited with ForeverGold alumni and community members from the Vail Valley for a campus update and a preview of the Right Here, Right Now Global Climate Summit.

Sun filters through the trees in early morning by Macky Auditorium

9 CU Boulder students, alumni receive 2022–23 Fulbright awards

June 16, 2022

Nine CU Boulder students and alumni have been named Fulbright finalists for the 2022–23 academic year by the U.S. Department of State and the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board. One student declined the scholarship and another five students were named alternates.

Artist's depiction of an electro-optic transducer, an ultra-thin wafer that can read out the information from a superconducting qubit.

What quantum information and snowflakes have in common, and what we can do about it

June 15, 2022

Qubits, the basic building blocks of quantum computers, are as fragile as snowflakes. Now, researchers have come up with a new way of reading out the information from certain kinds of qubits with a light touch, potentially paving the way for a quantum internet.

two people peek over a neighbor's fence

Privacy isn’t in the Constitution—but it’s everywhere in constitutional law

June 15, 2022

The Supreme Court has found protections for people’s privacy in several constitutional amendments—and used it as a basis for some pretty fundamental protections. CU expert Scott Skinner-Thompson shares on The Conversation.

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