The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga is one of 90 organizations within a statewide coalition awarded National Science Foundation funding through its Regional Innovation Engines program. The coalition, Advancing Technology-Enabled Mobility Solutions (ATEMS-TN), is an alliance of academics, industry and technical societies that will put the $1 million “Type-1” NSF award toward outlining a statewide transportation mobility strategy to position Tennessee to compete for up to $160 million in federal funding awarded in 2025 to implement that strategy.
UTC a core partner in Kentucky, Tennessee “GAME Change” team awarded $1 million NSF grant
An alliance of Kentucky and Tennessee universities and partner entities make up the Generate Advanced Manufacturing Excellence for Change (GAME Change) coalition that has been awarded a $1 million National Science Foundation grant. The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga has a “core partner” role in the coalition led by the University of Kentucky.
Online collaboration leads to summer research opportunity for UTC sophomore
Thanks to a project funded by the National Science Foundation, biology major Lauren Kippes will be spending eight weeks in Argentina this summer studying owl monkeys.
Workshop offers ways to market research ideas and results
The path to commercialization isn’t easy or simple.
Research seeks rapid method to detect food contaminants
Results from samples sent to labs can take weeks to return.
Math professor receives $537,000 NSF grant
Assistant Professor Eleni Panagiotou will use math to study cell division.
Professor Jennifer Ellis selected as program director for NSF
For the second time in three years, a STEM faculty member has been chosen for a national role.
Mechanical engineering professor wins $542,000 award
Mechanical engineering professor wins $542,000 award from National Science Foundation.
Professor in the College of Engineering and Computer Science recognized nationally
Li Yang is involved in several initiatives sponsored by the National Science Foundation.
Grad student chosen for five-year fellowship from National Science Foundation
Thomas Wiegand describes his selection as “surreal,” “jarring” and “insane.”