Cincinnati Future: Inside UC's aerospace program
September 15, 2021
UC College of Engineering and Applied Science professor Kelly Cohen talks about how co-op prepares UC engineering students for a career in aerospace.
September 15, 2021
UC College of Engineering and Applied Science professor Kelly Cohen talks about how co-op prepares UC engineering students for a career in aerospace.
November 12, 2021
Gizmodo highlights research into autonomous robots by University of Cincinnati aerospace engineering students. The AI system that can open doors without human help works in simulations. Now students are translating the AI to a working robot.
September 20, 2021
New Atlas highlights novel nozzles designed by University of Cincinnati aerospace engineers that reduce jet engine noise in scale-model F-18 Super Hornet fighters. The research holds promise to reduce jet engine noise in civilian and military aviation.
September 13, 2021
UC aerospace engineering student Lynn Pickering explains to Impossible Engineering why the XV-3 aircraft revolutionized tilt-rotor technology that led to the Osprey.
March 21, 2022
UC College of Engineering and Applied Science graduate and Lt. Col. Terry Calvert talks about her military experience.
August 12, 2020
UC aerospace engineering professor Kelly Cohen tells EdTech that unmanned aerial vehicles can be useful during a pandemic.
June 2, 2023
UC College of Engineering and Applied Science Professor Kelly Cohen talks to Fox19 about how artificial intelligence is becoming more ubiquitous as it becomes more trustworthy. UC is hosting an international conference on artificial intelligence.
June 26, 2023
Thales CEO Patrice Caine tells CNBC that AI should not be a black box.
March 28, 2023
The “College Matters. Alma Matters.” Podcast interviewed University of Cincinnati aerospace engineering Ph.D. candidate Lynn Pickering earlier this month. In the episode she discusses her undergraduate experience at UC, the importance of co-op and her research of fuzzy logic.
January 18, 2023
In an article for the news journal of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, UC assistant professor Sameh Eisa explains how accurate mathematical modeling improves the efficiency of wind turbines.