Jacobs School News Archive
2009 News Releases
Computer Scientists Explore Energy Efficiency in Multi-Scale Computing Systems
December 15, 2009
The University of California, San Diego and nine other universities are members of a new research center charged with finding ways to improve the design of computing systems ranging from large data centers to tiny brain sensors. In its first three years, the Multi-Scale Systems Center (MuSyC) will focus on tackling a critical issue affecting multiple scales: energy efficiency. Full Story
Engineers Help Secure California Highways and Roads
December 10, 2009
Engineers at the UC San Diego Englekirk Structural Engineering Center, which has the largest outdoor shake table in the United States, recently tested the seismic response of a semi-gravity reinforced concrete retaining wall. Full Story

Supportive Materials will Help Regenerate Heart Tissue
December 8, 2009
Bioengineers from University of California, San Diego are developing new regenerative therapies for heart disease that could influence the way in which regenerative therapies for cardiovascular and other diseases are treated in the future. Full Story
San Diegans and their Cell Phones will help Computer Scientists Monitor Air Pollution
December 2, 2009
You want to go for a run, but you don’t want to run in polluted air that might aggravate your asthma. University of California, San Diego computer scientists are creating a network of environmental sensors that will help you avoid air pollution hot spots that exist exactly when you are planning your route. The system will provide up-to-the-minute information on outdoor and indoor air quality, based on environmental information collected by hundreds, and eventually thousands, of sensors attached to the backpacks, purses, jackets and board shorts of San Diegans going about daily life. Full Story
Undergraduate Team Dukes it Out in BattleBots Competition
December 1, 2009
Last fall, 10 self-professed robotics geeks with very different backgrounds rallied together behind a common mission: to create a robot so limber and so destructive that it would take no prisoners. Full Story
UCSD Researchers Discover That Defects in Carbon Nanotubes Could Lead to Improved Charge and Energy Storage Systems
November 19, 2009
Most people would like to be able to charge their cell phones and other personal electronics quickly and not too often. A recent discovery made by UC San Diego engineers could lead to carbon nanotube-based supercapacitors that could do just this. Full Story

Systems Biology Approach Provides Insulin Resistance Insights
November 19, 2009
Researchers from the University of California, San Diego recently offered the sharpest-yet picture of how core biochemical pathways in skeletal muscle cells and fat cells are altered in people who suffer from insulin resistance—a primary defect in type 2 diabetes and obesity. Taking a systems biology approach, the bioengineers and medical researchers also determined how a common class of drugs for treating insulin resistance—TZDs—alter these same core pathways. This led the team to uncover previously unknown effects of TZDs and insights that could lead to improved drug therapies for insulin resistance. Full Story

Swarms of Ocean Robots will Drift in Formation, Monitor Oil Spills, Thanks to Advanced Controls Systems
November 10, 2009
To develop control systems for “swarms” of miniature robotic ocean explorers that could one day help predict where ocean currents will carry oil spills, engineers at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering recently won a nearly $1.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation. The engineers are leading the development of the control systems for swarms of small, inexpensive, underwater robotic ocean drifters that researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at UC San Diego are designing, building and deploying. Full Story
UCSD Discovery Allows Scientists to Experimentally Annotate Genomes for the First Time
November 9, 2009
Bioengineers at UC San Diego have made a breakthrough development that will now allow scientists to perform full delineation of the location and use of genomic elements. Full Story
Engineering Students Help San Diego Region Secure $154 Million in Solar Bonds
November 3, 2009
Engineering students at UC San Diego played a critical role in helping the university and the San Diego region secure a total of $154 million in federal bonds for solar installation projects. Full Story

University of California, San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering Ranked 9th in the World
November 3, 2009
The University of California, San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering is the 9th best in the world for engineering/technology and 15th in the world for computer sciences, according to an academic ranking of the top 100 world universities published by the Institute of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University. Full Story
Electrical Engineers Go Head to Head with Genius on Music Playlists
October 27, 2009
Electrical engineers recently pitted Genius – the music recommendation system in Apple’s iTunes – against two experimental music recommender systems. Genius appears to capture acoustic similarities among songs within the same playlist, the researchers found. Full Story
New in Class: Digital Signage to Make Campus Smarter, Safer, Greener
October 22, 2009
Researchers from the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2) are installing a number of LED digital signs in classrooms throughout UC San Diego, with the eventual goal of outfitting the entire campus with the notification system. Full Story
UCSD Researchers Pave the Way for Effective Liver Treatments
October 8, 2009
A combination of bioengineering and medical research at the University of California, San Diego has led to a new discovery that could pave the way for more effective treatments for liver disease. Full Story
Jacobs School Undergrad is Green Intern in Washington D.C.
October 2, 2009
The nation’s first “green” intern in the U.S. Capitol--Mark Galvan--hails from the Jacobs School of Engineering at one of the country’s greenest universities, the University of California, San Diego. Full Story

Students Explore Topics Outside Comfort Zone
September 30, 2009
The Temporal Dynamics of Learning Center (TDLC) held its first “Boot Camp” from August 10-22 at UC San Diego. Full Story
Jacobs Scholars Make their Mark in the Future of Engineering
September 30, 2009
Jennifer Fang learned her first programming language, Visual Basic, in the third grade. Since then she has honed her programming skills and is entering UC San Diego’s Jacobs School of Engineering this fall as a freshman computer science major, with an emphasis on bioinformatics. Full Story
Bioengineer is One of Five UCSD Recipients of NIH Awards to Encourage High-Risk Research and Innovation
September 25, 2009
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced $348 million in awards nationwide to encourage investigators to explore bold ideas that have the potential to catapult fields forward and speed the translation of research into improved health. Bioengineering Assistant Professor Adam Engler is one of five researchers from the University of California, San Diego to have been awarded such a grant in 2009. Full Story
Comprehensive Understanding of Bacteria Could Lead to New Insights into Many Organisms
September 25, 2009
Investigators at Burnham Institute for Medical Research (Burnham), University of California, San Diego (UC San Diego), The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI), Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation (GNF) and other institutions have constructed a complete model, including three dimensional protein structures, of the central metabolic network of the bacterium Thermotoga maritima (T. maritima). Full Story
Siebel Foundation Awards Top UC San Diego Bioengineering Graduate Students
September 22, 2009
As breakthrough discoveries in bioengineering become more crucial to fundamental global issues, including health, food production and water supplies, UC San Diego’s Jacobs School of Engineering’s top ranked bioengineering department continues to be on the cutting edge of this field. The Siebel Foundation has recognized the Jacob School’s pioneering efforts with a $2 million endowment to fund scholarships for some of its top bioengineering graduate students. Full Story

Netflix Turned to Computer Science Professor for Million Dollar Competition
September 21, 2009
Netflix today awarded a $1 million prize to BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos—the team that created the most accurate movie recommendation system. This is the final stage in the Netflix Prize, a worldwide data mining competition for which University of California, San Diego computer science professor Charles Elkan has served as a contest designer, consultant and judge for the past three years. Full Story

invent@UCSD Features Electrical Engineering Professor Ian Galton
September 14, 2009
Electrical engineering professor Ian Galton is the featured innovator in the September 2009 issue of “invent@UCSD”—the newsletter of the UC San Diego Technology Transfer Office. Galton leads the Integrated Signal Processing Group within the Jacobs School’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Full Story
UCSD Part of $105 Million NSF Earthquake Engineering Center Led by Purdue
September 14, 2009
Purdue University will tap into UC San Diego's structural engineering expertise as part of a $105 million grant from the National Science Foundation to create a center that will serve as headquarters for the operations of the George E. Brown, Jr. Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation, or NEES. Full Story
Going With the Flow: Using Star Power to Better Understand Fusion
September 11, 2009
Under a new $5.8 million five-year grant from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), UCSD will host and lead a new Center for Momentum Transport and Flow Organization in Plasmas and Magnetofluids, which will bring together astrophysical and magnetic fusion theorists, experimentalists and computationalists from multiple institutions. Full Story
Plasma Power: Turning Fusion Into a Renewable Energy Source
September 10, 2009
A team of researchers from UC San Diego, MIT and UC Berkeley have received a $7 million research grant from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) that could lead us one step closer to transforming fusion into a future green energy source. Full Story
UC San Diego Scientist's Work Will Contribute to Better Understanding of Nuclear Ignition
August 28, 2009
As the nation’s nuclear weapons are aging (think the beginning of the Cold War), the U.S. government is turning to researchers and scientists at universities such as UC San Diego to figure out safe and reliable ways to estimate their longevity and to understand the physics of thermonuclear reactions in the absence of underground testing currently prohibited under law. Full Story

Scalable Energy Efficient Data Centers
August 27, 2009
A UC San Diego-led team of computer scientists and optical interconnection systems technologists in the Center for Integrated Access Networks (CIAN) is developing Scalable Energy Efficient Data Centers (SEED, for short). It consists of novel optical interconnection technologies for a multi-stage network topology. The goal is to build SEED as an integrated solution encompassing physical layer hardware, protocols and topologies — while offering tomorrow's data centers greater scalability, bisectional bandwidth, fault tolerance and energy efficiency. Full Story
Retrofitted Historic Building Survives Strong Simulated Jolts During UCSD Test
August 25, 2009
As part of the $1.24 million research project sponsored by the National Science Foundation under the Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES) program, a three-story, masonry-infilled, reinforced concrete frame representing structures built in California in the 1920s was tested at the NEES -UCSD Englekirk Structural Engineering Center, home of the world’s largest outdoor shake table. Full Story

Jacobs School Materials Science Research Profiled in NSF Video
August 24, 2009
UC San Diego materials science researchers from the Jacobs School of Engineering are featured in a Web video and news story produced by the National Science Foundation’s “Science Nation”—an online science magazine that brings cutting-edge research directly to the public. The feature “Antlers, Shells and Beaks” profiles ground breaking materials science research being done at the Jacobs School of Engineering. Full Story
UC San Diego Robots Take Center Stage at National Robotics Conference
August 20, 2009
Robots created by UC San Diego engineers made their way to Austin, Texas recently to take center stage during NI Week, the annual robotics extravaganza hosted by National Instruments. Full Story

Millionths of a Second Can Cost Millions of Dollars: A New Way to Track Network Delays
August 20, 2009
Computer scientists have developed an inexpensive solution for diagnosing delays in data center networks as short as tens of millionths of seconds—delays that can lead to multi-million dollar losses for investment banks running automatic stock trading systems. Similar delays can delay parallel processing in high performance cluster computing applications run by Fortune 500 companies and universities. University of California, San Diego and Purdue University computer scientists presented this work on August 20, 2009 at SIGCOMM, the premier networking conference. Full Story
UC San Diego Ranked 7th Best Public University by U.S. News & World Report
August 20, 2009
The University of California, San Diego ranked as the seventh best public university in the nation in the 2010 America’s Best Colleges guidebook issued today by U.S. News & World Report, and 35th among the 262 ranked national universities, both public and private. Full Story

Computer Scientists Scale Layer 2 Center Networks to 100,000 Ports and Beyond
August 18, 2009
University of California, San Diego computer scientists have created software that they hope will lead to data centers that logically function as single, plug-and-play networks that will scale to the massive scale of modern data center networks. Full Story

Computer Science Instruction Featured by Associated Press
August 12, 2009
Cell phones, clickers, the Internet, and in-class blogging systems all serve as tools for learning in Beth Simon’s introduction to computer science classes at UC San Diego. Simon’s approach to undergraduate lectures recently caught the interest of journalist Megan Scott from the Associated Press, who wrote about the ways in which college classrooms are going high-tech in order to engage students. Full Story

Computer Scientists Take Over Electronic Voting Machine with New Programming Technique
August 10, 2009
Computer scientists demonstrated that criminals could hack an electronic voting machine and steal votes using a malicious programming approach that had not been invented when the voting machine was designed. The team of scientists from University of California, San Diego and the University of Michigan, and Princeton University employed “return-oriented programming” to force a Sequoia AVC Advantage electronic voting machine to turn against itself and steal votes. Full Story
UC San Diego Engineer Provides Insights to Decades-Old DNA Squabble
July 30, 2009
A group of nanoengineers, biologists and physicists have used innovative approaches to deduce the internal structure of chromatin, a key player in DNA regulation, to reconcile a longstanding controversy in this field. Full Story

Cheat-Resistant 3D iPhone Game Relies on Score-Checking Replays
July 27, 2009
Aliens are stealing your beloved sheep and you’ve got to stop them. That’s the premise for TowerMadness, a new 3D iPhone game that is one of the most cheat-resistant iPhone games available, according to its three developers, all with ties to the University of California, San Diego. Full Story
UC San Diego Installs High-Efficiency Sun-Tracking Solar Panels
July 27, 2009
The University of California, San Diego has begun producing electricity with newly installed solar panels made by Concentrix Solar that automatically track the sun as it crosses the daytime sky and concentrates sunlight onto hundreds of electricity-producing solar cells, each smaller than a shirt button. Full Story
UC San Diego Nets $3 Million NSF Grant to Promote Science
July 23, 2009
The University of California, San Diego has received a $3 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to support the 2010 San Diego Science Festival and fund the creation and growth of Science Festivals nationwide. Full Story
Jacobs School Expertise in Advanced Autonomous Robotics, Cybersecurity Shines at National Security Conference
July 17, 2009
Future military missions will depend on large, networked groups of sensor-equipped vehicles, which can be deployed in extreme conditions with little to no human intervention. “Inspiration can be taken from biological groups like schools of fish, flocks of birds. These will be multi-robot networks, where each individual senses its environment, communicates with others, processes information gathered and takes local action in response, said Sonia Martinez, an assistant professor the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at UC San Diego’s Jacobs School of Engineering. Full Story

UC San Diego NanoTumor Center and NanoTecNexus Win Telly Award for Educational Video
July 16, 2009
The University of California, San Diego NanoTumor Center and NanoTecNexus (NTN) (formerly NanoBioNexus)—a leading nanotech education organization—won the 2009 Bronze Telly Award for the production of a video on approaches to fighting cancer using nanotechnology. The three minute video, entitled “Fighting Cancer with Nanotechnology,” is embedded below and can be viewed at NanoTecNexus, YouTube and around the Web. Full Story
UCSD Scientists Shed 'Light' on Semiconductor Quandary
July 14, 2009
UC San Diego scientists are using laser plasma-produced light sources to explore performance improvements of critical inspection tools for the semiconductor industry, which ultimately will enable industry to pursue even better and faster chips. Full Story

New Drugs Faster from Natural Compounds: a UC San Diego Breakthrough
July 13, 2009
Researchers have invented computational tools to decode and rapidly determine whether natural compounds collected in oceans and forests are new—or if these pharmaceutically promising compounds have already been described and are therefore not patentable. This University of California, San Diego advance will finally enable scientists to rapidly characterize ring-shaped nonribosomal peptides (NRPs)—a class of natural compounds of intense interest due to their potential to yield or inspire new pharmaceuticals. The study will be published in the July 13 online issue of journal Nature Methods. Full Story

Robot Learns to Smile and Frown
July 8, 2009
A hyper-realistic Einstein robot at the University of California, San Diego has learned to smile and make facial expressions through a process of self-guided learning. The UC San Diego researchers used machine learning to “empower” their robot to learn to make realistic facial expressions. Full Story
UCSD Engineers to Shake Historic Masonry Building During Strong Simulated Earthquakes
July 8, 2009
UC San Diego researchers will be shaking a three-story, 1920s era masonry building on the world’s largest outdoor shake table during a series of simulated earthquakes ranging from about 5.0-7.0 in magnitude on Thursday, July 9. Full Story
Jacobs School Undergrads Go International this Summer with PRIME
July 7, 2009
Twenty four Jacobs School undergraduates are among the 33 University of California, San Diego undergraduates working as researchers in laboratories across the Pacific Rim and India this summer. Full Story
Two-Antenna Quad-Beam 11-15 GHz Phased Array RFIC Targeted at Satellite Systems and Advanced Radars
July 2, 2009
High speed SiGe process replaces 8 GaAs chips, lowering cost and increasing integratio Full Story

Bioengineering Grad Students are Finalists in $250K Global Business Plan Competition
June 26, 2009
University of California, San Diego bioengineering graduate students led by Raj Krishnan are among just 16 finalist teams from across the globe who will compete on June 30, 2009 for $250,000 in a global business plan competition. Full Story
Priming Future Engineering Leaders
June 17, 2009
The competitiveness the American tech industry will not only depend on innovation but also effective leaders. This was the topic of discussion during the Bernard and Sophia Gordon Engineering Leadership Center Inaugural Forum at UC San Diego Full Story

At ENSPIRE Engineering Undergrads Inspire Local Eighth Graders
June 16, 2009
Imagine 420 eighth graders arriving at your doorstep and expecting you to inspire, teach, entertain and feed them all day. This is exactly the challenge the undergraduates from UC San Diego’s Jacobs School of Engineering took on earlier this year at ENSPIRE, one of the many events that make up Engineers Week at UC San Diego. Full Story

Jacobs School Faculty Receive HP Labs Innovation Research Awards
June 15, 2009
Two computer scientists at the University of California, San Diego’s Center for Networked Systems (CNS) are among 60 professors worldwide to receive 2009 HP Labs Innovation Research Awards. Amin Vahdat and Geoffrey M. Voelker are both computer science professors in UC San Diego’s Jacobs School of Engineering. Full Story
UC San Diego Engineers Test World's First Composite Landing Gear Braces for Boeing 787
June 9, 2009
For the first time, UC San Diego engineers have performed tests on landing gear components for the aerospace industry. Full Story

Toward Cheaper Imaging Systems for Identifying Concealed Weapons on the Human Body
June 8, 2009
Electrical engineers from UC San Diego have created high-performance W-Band silicon-germanium (SiGe) radio frequency integrated circuits (RFICs) for passive millimeter-wave imaging. This advance could lead to significantly less expensive imaging systems for identifying concealed weapons, for helping helicopters to land during dust storms, and for high frequency data communications. Electrical engineers from UC San Diego presented this circuit at the 2009 IEEE Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits (RFIC) Symposium. This work was also selected as one of the best three student papers at RFIC 2009. Full Story
Facebook Games for a Better Music Search Engine
June 3, 2009
Electrical engineers at UC San Diego created games on Facebook in order to improve their experimental music search engine that is capable of listening to new songs and accurately labeling them with words—with no help from humans. These computer-labeled songs can then be retrieved later when someone types these same words into the cutting-edge music search engine. In April, the engineers launched the music discovery games on Facebook as an application called Herd It (http://apps.facebook.com/herd-it). Full Story

Fluid Dynamics Research to Make Peeing in Space More Comfortable and Sanitary
June 2, 2009
Engineering students at UC San Diego are studying the fluid dynamics of water in order to build a more comfortable and sanitary urine collection device for space travel. The mechanical and aerospace engineering undergraduates from the Jacobs School of Engineering mimicked the behavior of streams of human urine in zero gravity in order to collect the data necessary to make better space urinals for both women and men. Full Story
Cancer Diagnostics Startup from UC San Diego Bioengineering Win Entrepreneurship Competition
June 2, 2009
A team of bioengineering graduate students from the Jacobs School of Engineering won first place at the UC San Diego Entrepreneur Challenge for the business plan they built around their new early cancer diagnostic technology. The bioengineering students have already formed a startup company, Biological Dynamics, and they are currently seeking funding from investors. Full Story
New Calit2 Associate Director at UC San Diego Sees Need for Closer Relations with Industry
June 1, 2009
Rajesh Gupta has been appointed an Associate Director in the UC San Diego division of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2). Full Story

How Oxidative Stress May Help Prolong Life
May 29, 2009
Oxidative stress has been linked to aging, cancer and other diseases in humans. Paradoxically, researchers have suggested that small exposure to oxidative conditions may actually offer protection from acute doses. Now, scientists at the University of California, San Diego, have discovered the gene responsible for this effect. Full Story

Toward Cheap Underwater Sensor Nets
May 26, 2009
UC San Diego computer scientists are one step closer to building low cost networks of underwater sensors for real time underwater environmental monitoring. At the IEEE Reconfigurable Architectures Workshop in Rome, Italy, on May 25, computer scientists from the Jacobs School of Engineering presented a paper highlighting the energy conservation benefits of using reconfigurable hardware rather than competing hardware platforms for their experimental underwater sensor nets. Full Story
From a Queen Song to a Better Music Search Engine
May 15, 2009
At a recent IEEE technology conference, UC San Diego electrical engineers presented a solution to their problem with the song “Bohemian Rhapsody,”—and it’s not that they don’t like this hit from the band Queen. Full Story
UC San Diego and Qualcomm Partner to Accelerate Wireless Healthcare Industry
May 14, 2009
UC San Diego hopes to accelerate the translation of wireless healthcare technologies from the laboratory to society through a Wireless Healthcare Innovation Challenge. Full Story
Junkyard Dreams: UC San Diego Students Vie for Winning Derby Status
May 12, 2009
From old bicycle parts to gold mannequin busts and cardboard pizza boxes, UC San Diego students put their skills to the test during the annual Junkyard Derby. The sixth annual Junkyard Derby, held May 8, drew 44 teams who designed, built and then raced cars made of junk. Full Story

Technology for Early-Cancer Diagnosis Leads Bioengineering Grad Student to Many Prizes and a Startup Company
May 11, 2009
For breakthroughs aimed at early-stage cancer diagnostics, Raj Krishnan, a bioengineering Ph.D. student at the University of California, San Diego has taken home three first place awards at graduate research competitions this year. Not pausing to polish his awards, Krishnan has co-founded Biological Dynamics, a startup company aimed at transferring the new cancer diagnostic technology from the laboratory to the clinic. Full Story

Robotic Mouse Makes Maze Debut at UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering
May 4, 2009
An intrepid group of UC San Diego undergraduate engineers designed and built a robotic mouse from scratch as part of the IEEE MicroMouse competition. Watch the video here. Full Story
UCSD Engineering Students Drive Into the Future With Electric Racecar
April 29, 2009
A group of engineering students at UC San Diego are helping to fuel the trend toward “green” vehicles by designing and building an electric racecar. Full Story
Sleep Talking PCs Save Energy and Money
April 23, 2009
Personal computers may soon save large amounts of energy by “sleep talking.” Computer scientists at UC San Diego and Microsoft Research have created a plug-and-play hardware prototype for personal computers that induces a new energy saving state known as “sleep talking.” Full Story
New Method Developed by UC San Diego Bioengineers Gives Regenerative Medicine a Boost
April 22, 2009
Bioengineers at UC San Diego have developed a breakthrough method for sequencing-based methylation profiling, which could help fuel personalized regenerative medicine and even lead to more efficient and cost-effective methods for studying certain diseases. Full Story

How Cells Change Gears: New Insights Published in Nature Genetics
April 20, 2009
Bioinformatics researchers from UC San Diego just moved closer to unlocking the mystery of how human cells switch from “proliferation mode” to “specialization mode.” This computational biology work from the Jacobs School of Engineering’s bioengineering department could lead to new ideas for curbing unwanted cell proliferation—including some cancers. This research, published in Nature Genetics, could also improve our understanding of how organs and other complex tissues develop. Full Story
UC San Diego and UC Davis Team to Boost Solar Power in California
April 15, 2009
The University of California, San Diego, in collaboration with UC Davis will use a two-year, $700,000 grant from the California Energy Commission (CEC) to expand the development and use of solar energy in the state. Full Story
Steel Bridge Designed and Built by Jacobs School Undergrads Finds Home at UCSD Library
April 15, 2009
A 200-pound steel bridge, completely designed and fabricated by a team of twelve UC San Diego undergraduate engineering students has found a new home: UC San Diego's Science & Engineering Library. The bridge won second place among 17 competing schools at the 2008 Pacific Southwest Regional Conference Steel Bridge Competition, held last year at Cal State Northridge. Full Story
One-Story Masonry Building Survives Strong Jolts During UC San Diego Seismic Tests
April 14, 2009
A one-story structure survived two days of intense earthquake jolts after engineering researchers at the University of California, San Diego put it to the test. Full Story

Jacobs School Students to Compete in Battle of the Brains in Stockholm
April 13, 2009
Three Jacobs School engineering students will join the next generation of elite problem solvers and compete in the IBM-sponsored “Battle of the Brains” World Finals contest in Stockholm, Sweden, April 18-22. Full Story

Life Sticks: Bioengineer Publishes Sticky Insights in journal Science
April 9, 2009
Sticky is good. A University of California, San Diego bioengineer is the first author on an article in the journal Science that provides insights on the “stickiness of life.” The big idea is that cells, tissues and organisms hailing from all limbs of the tree of life respond to stimuli using basic biological “modules.” Full Story
Jacobs School Helps Celebrate Science
April 9, 2009
When a capacity crowd of more than 50,000 people flocked to Balboa Park on April 4 for what organizers are calling “the largest one-day science gathering ever in the United States.,” UC San Diego faculty, staff and students, including those from the Jacobs School of Engineering, were among the many exhibitors and visitors contributing to the landmark event. Full Story
High School Students Get The Big Picture on Nanotechnology at UC San Diego
April 3, 2009
From hair gel to virtual gene expression, Southern California high school students got the “big” picture on nanotechnology at the University of California, San Diego on April 1. Full Story
UC San Students Lift 'Dow Jones' For Annual Engineering Competition
March 23, 2009
The ‘Dow Jones’ got a lift on Thursday, March 19 by structural engineering students at the University of California, San Diego. We’re not talking about the overall indicator of the condition of the Stock Market, but a handmade concrete canoe destined for Hawaii. Full Story
New UC San Diego Center To Train Future Engineering Leaders to Help America Stay Competitive
March 23, 2009
Engineering leadership today is more important than ever to ensure the United States remains at the forefront of technological innovation. The UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering plans to help meet this challenge through the new Bernard and Sophia Gordon Engineering Leadership Center. Full Story
Will a Mechanical Engineering Undergrad Win the Best Book Collection Prize Three Years in a Row?
March 18, 2009
While students buy and sell text books more frequently than they change apartments, many students are simultaneously building up personal libraries which reflect their passions and quirks. Mechanical Engineering major Evan Woolley is one such personal-library builder. Full Story

Bioengineering Professor Trey Ideker Wins 2009 Overton Prize
March 12, 2009
UC San Diego bioengineering professor Trey Ideker has won the International Society for Computational Biology’s Overton Prize. Full Story
UC San Diego Engineering Students Launch Cockroaches and Cameras Into Space
March 11, 2009
A group of cockroaches recently took a ride on a high-altitude balloon launched into space by freshmen aerospace engineering students from the University of California, San Diego. Full Story
Employers Mine UC San Diego for NextGen Engineers
March 6, 2009
Despite a sluggish economy, more than 70 high tech and life science firms participated in the Disciplines in Engineering Career Fair (DECaF) on February 20 at the University of California, San Diego. Full Story
Research Expo Highlights UC San Diego's Engineering Prowess
February 25, 2009
From novel nanoengineering approaches to space robots, ‘green’ computing, weather prediction technology and structural health monitoring, engineering students at the University of California, San Diego strutted their stuff during the Jacobs School of Engineering Research Expo 2009. Full Story
E-Games 2009 Highlight 'Coolness' of Engineering
February 18, 2009
During a mix of rain and sunshine, Jacobs School of Engineering students took the University of California, San Diego by storm Tuesday, February 18 during E-Games 2009. Full Story

New High Frequency Amplifier Harnesses Millimeter Waves in Silicon for Fast Wireless
February 11, 2009
New imaging and high capacity wireless communications systems are one step closer to reality, thanks to a millimeter wave amplifier invented at the University of California, San Diego and unveiled on Feb 11, 2009 at the prestigious International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) in San Francisco, Calif. Full Story
UC San Diego Kicks off 'E' Week
February 11, 2009
What do a golden calculator and tomatoes have in common? Find out during Engineers Week at the University of California, San Diego February 17-20. Full Story
UC San Diego Engineering Students Create 'Wall of Widgets' for Mobile Internet
February 10, 2009
From finding the nearest restroom to checking the latest movie listings, engineering students at the University of California at San Diego have received kudos for their creative “widgets” designed for a new mobile Internet platform called Plaza. Full Story
UC San Diego Engineer Develops Method to Combat Congenital Heart Disease in Children
February 6, 2009
Congenital heart defects account for five times more deaths annually than all childhood cancers combined. Alison Marsden, an assistant mechanical and aerospace engineering professor at the University of California, has developed a unique set of computer modeling tools that are expected to enhance pediatric surgeons’ ability to perform critical heart surgery on children. Full Story
Engineering Graduate Student Narrows Gap Between High-Resolution Video and Virtual Reality
February 3, 2009
Han Suk Kim, a computer science and engineering Ph.D. student at the Jacobs School of Engineering, has developed an efficient “mipmap” algorithm that "shrinks" high-resolution video content so that it can be played interactively in Virtual Reality Environments (VE). He has also created several optimization solutions for sustaining a stable video playback frame rate, even when the video is projected onto non-rectangular VE screens. Full Story
Engineers Try to Bring Down the House During Simulated Earthquake Tests
February 2, 2009
Engineers at the University of California at San Diego put a single-story house to the test on January 26 via a series of strong simulated earthquake shakes. Full Story
UC San Diego Engineers Develop Novel Method for Accelerated Bone Growth
January 28, 2009
Engineers at the University of California at San Diego have come up with a way to help accelerate bone growth through the use of nanotubes and stem cells. Full Story

Jacobs School Engineers Closing the Gap Between High-Speed Data Transmission and Processing
January 27, 2009
Electrical engineers at the University of California, San Diego have achieved world-record speeds for real-time signal processing in an effort to meet ambitious goals set by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to develop the first Terabit-scale technology for optical processing. The technology could have widespread ramifications for networking, computing, defense and other industries. Full Story

Computer Scientists and Industry Partners Discuss Advances in Networked Computing at CNS Research Review
January 21, 2009
The members of CNS held their half-yearly research review last week to outline progress-to-date on their collective projects across all aspects of networked systems. In addition, more than 40 industrial participants from CNS member companies presented some of the top challenges facing their respective organizations, and provided feedback on the ongoing work at the center. Full Story

Iconic Relic from Computer Game Finds Home in Engineering Library
January 16, 2009
UC San Diego’s Science & Engineering Library has a new “librarian” – Chameleon JumpSuit. This life-size sci-fi time traveler action suit is from the popular Journeyman Project “Legacy of Time” computer video game which was created by Presto Studios, a company founded by UCSD alumni. Full Story

Greening the Internet Economy
January 15, 2009
The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) and the University of California, San Diego, one of the nation's greenest universities, are joining for a groundbreaking symposium on January 22-23 to explore how to improve the technology sector's energy efficiency while developing innovations to help other industries reduce their carbon footprints. Full Story

Jacobs School Water Conservation Research Makes Headlines around the World
January 2, 2009
Water conservation research that Jacobs School of Engineering professor Jan Kleissl and his students are performing in California’s Imperial Valley is making headlines around the world. A story by Associated Press journalist John Rogers about Kleissl’s efforts to monitor irrigation water needs using laser beams has run in The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times and many other news outlets. The story first appeared as a short item from the most recent issue of the Jacobs School alumni magazine, Pulse. Full Story