Mar. 2, 2026 - ME Faculty and Staff Newsletter
The mechanical engineering communication and external relations team is seeking research story ideas that may be a good fit for EurekAlert and broader media pitching.
If your lab has recently published a research paper, or is scheduled to in the near future, please reach out to Alexander Servantez or with a summary of the work and some times throughout the week you are available.
Quick Shout Outs
Riffell earns 2026 BFA Excellence in Leadership & Service Award
This week! Another quantum faculty candidate on campus
Announcements & Events
Join the ME community for weekly coffee breaks
Department Highlights
Why do we get a skip in our step when we’re happy? Thank dopamine
Professor Alaa Ahmed is leading a study that highlights the central role that dopamine, a brain chemical associated with reward, seems to play in making people move faster when they want something. The findings could one day help scientists understand and even diagnose a range of human medical conditions, including Parkinson’s disease and depression.
Global collaboration to limit air pollution flowing across borders could save millions of lives
A first-of-its-kind study, led by Professor Daven Henze and collaborators at Cardiff University in the United Kingdom, assesses how health benefits of aggressive climate policy travel across international borders. The researchers say that ambitious climate action to improve global air quality could save up to 1.32 million lives per year by 2040.
What causes snow slopes to collapse? Vriend explains, with tips for surviving
Avalanche deaths are rare inside the boundaries of ski resorts, but the risk rises in the backcountry. Thirty backcountry avalanche deaths were reported in the U.S. during the 2022-23 season, 16 the following year, and 22 in 2024-25. In this article published by The Conversation, Associate Professor Nathalie Vriend explains what happens in an avalanche and techniques for surviving one.
Student feedback drives major ME curriculum changes for fall 2026
Starting in fall 2026, the Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering is rolling out two major curriculum changes—guided by student feedback—that aim to rebalance credit allocation and streamline degree requirements. Janet Tsai, associate teaching professor and associate chair for undergraduate education, said the changes will help improve student learning experiences for all current and prospective students.




