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See the Texas A&M University College of Engineering news from December 2024 .

Peter German ’21 has launched a thriving career at Idaho National Laboratory using computers to simulate nuclear reactor physics.

Dr. Joseph Sang-II Kwon has found a way to make hypotheses more accurate by utilizing physics-based modeling with data-driven methods.

Ken Sheblak ’88 embodied the Aggie spirit throughout his life, and in his honor, friends have come together to create the Ken Sheblak ’88 Memorial Endowed Scholarship.

The Texas Floodplain Management Association created a scholarship to memorialize an Aggie engineer and support future engineers.

New research aims to improve speech anonymization technology.

Graduate students Fatima Mahnaz and Ashfaq Iftakher have been chosen to showcase their research at the Global Young Scientist Summit 2025 in Singapore.

Five College of Engineering faculty honored with the most prestigious award for faculty within The Texas A&M University System.

Director of the University Consortium for Hypersonics has been designated as a Regents Fellow by the Texas A&M System Board of Regents.

Zahra Ghiasi will represent Texas A&M in the regional Three Minute Thesis research presentation competition.

Celebrating 30 years of innovation, the center reflects on its legacy of excellence and looks forward to more years of groundbreaking achievements and transformative contributions.

New research at Texas A&M University leverages emerging technology to reshape how we teach and learn.

Dr. Thomas Overbye was recognized for his outstanding contributions to teaching.

New research explores nanobubble stability and its implications across a variety of real-world applications.

New research advances understanding of the habitability of icy moons.

Texas A&M University College of Engineering students display innovation, creativity and artistic abilities in the Inaugural Engineering Art Competition.

Dr. Robert Balog and Dr. Jaime Grunlan have been selected as National Academy of Inventors Fellows.

Dr. Kinsey Skillen leads a new 42-month TxDOT research project at the Center for Infrastructure Renewal.

Research has uncovered how the stiffening of a cell’s environment drives cancer progression, paving the way for new treatments.

In a new study, Texas A&M researchers have used a skin-like material as a platform for investigating infections from intravenous catheters.

Kyle Blessing experienced a transformative journey through the Engineering Academies.