Eric Work '07 discusses his career, how the electrical and computer engineering master's program prepared him for his role at NVIDIA and his advice for aspiring engineers.
College of Engineering professors organized the event that served as a primer on quantum computing and offered high schoolers a leg up on applying to UC Davis with tips and best practices for college applications.
Materials science and engineering professor Marina Leite has received $1 million to make switchable photonic devices more efficient with hybrid perovskites, a class of materials with physical properties that can be controlled through light alone.
Professor Bevan Baas and his team collaborate with a UC Davis engineering alumnus to develop a chip that promises to advance communication and radar systems with its ability to rapidly process radio frequency signals in complex electromagnetic environments.
When Sayan Bhatia was 15, he co-founded the nonprofit program Start STEM Early to make learning science and math accessible and enjoyable for kids. Now a computer engineering major at UC Davis, Bhatia takes what he is learning to expand the reach of his outreach.
This summer, select UC Davis engineering students spent eight weeks working with novel technologies and research, developing high-demand, hands-on skills, and gaining insight into unexpected career paths.
Electrical and computer engineering faculty from UC Davis are part of Northwest AI Hub, a new center funded by the CHIPS and Science Act to advance semiconductor technologies.
From the lecture halls of UC Davis to the forefront of aviation meteorology, three College of Engineering alumni have struck lighting in the meteorological monitoring landscape.
Modeling computers after the human brain — coding in electrical impulses instead of ones and zeroes — promises advanced problem-solving skills and low energy consumption.
The new, UC Davis-developed sensor can detect vibrations a thousand times smaller and movement a hundred times smaller than a strand of human hair. It's also just a stepping stone to an even smaller, more powerful sensor.