Press Release Archive


2013 News Releases

Learning by Shaking

Learning by Shaking

December 3, 2013

Over the past seven years, more than 7,000 sixth-graders from 26 schools in San Diego County built their own structures and got to test them on small shake tables at the Jacobs School of Engineering. It’s all part of the Earthquake Engineering with K’NEX Outreach Program run by the UC San Diego chapter of the Society of Civil and Structural Engineers. Full Story


UC San Diego Shake Table, Robot Win Best of What's New Awards from Popular Science

UC San Diego Shake Table, Robot Win Best of What's New Awards from Popular Science

November 13, 2013

The biggest outdoor shake table in the world and a robot designed to move along utility lines have received Best of What’s New awards from Popular Science, the world’s largest science and technology magazine. The two projects are featured in the magazine’s December issue, now on newsstands. Full Story


Rocketing Ahead

Rocketing Ahead

November 1, 2013

On a hot Saturday afternoon in the Mojave Desert, a team of UC San Diego engineering students huddled in a small underground bunker and watched quietly as the rocket engine they had designed over the past eight months flared to life on a test platform. As a jet of rocket fuel sprang out of the engine at supersonic speed, the students cheered loudly.The test by the UC San Diego chapter of Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS) marked the first time that a university-led group had successfully designed, built and tested a 3-D-printed rocket engine, according to Space.com. Full Story


Team Investigates Earthquake Retrofits for 'Soft' First-floor Buildings on Jacobs School Shake Table

Team Investigates Earthquake Retrofits for 'Soft' First-floor Buildings on Jacobs School Shake Table

August 13, 2013

A team of researchers, led by Colorado State University engineering professor John van de Lindt, has spent the last month shaking a four-story building on the world’s largest outdoor shake table at the University of California, San Diego, to learn how to make structures with first-floor garages better withstand seismic shocks. Full Story