It’s getting hot in here: WVU engineer improves efficiency of U.S. energy infrastructure
In the United States we throw away a lot of energy.
In the United States we throw away a lot of energy.
As healthcare facilities grapple with personal protective equipment shortages,West Virginia Universityresearchers are going against the grain to help with an earthy, unorthodox resource: wood.
Two engineers at West Virginia University are using artificial intelligence in their pursuit to help answer some of the most daunting questions about the history of the universe.
Humans are naturally social creatures. As infants we intensely look at the faces of our parent or caregiver not only to memorize what they look like, but to connect the face with the voice.
Usually, the Earth’s magnetic field shields us from the misadventures of our nearest star, the mighty sun.
A distinguished higher education leader and expert in energy systems and sustainability – key areas in West Virginia University’s research – has been selected as the next leader of the Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources.
For more than a decade, astronomers across the globe have wrestled with the perplexities of fast radio bursts — intense, unexplained cosmic flashes of energy, light years away, that pop for mere milliseconds.