Inspiring students in West Texas
A group of Sandians volunteered at the Introduce a Girl to Engineering event, hosted by Pantex Women in Nuclear in Amarillo, Texas.
Can clay capture carbon dioxide?
A team of engineers and scientists are exploring new ways to capture carbon dioxide from the air we breathe.
Hackers could try to take over a military aircraft; can a cyber shuffle stop them?
Sandia and Purdue University team up to test cyberdefense against an algorithm trained to break it.
New superalloy could cut carbon emissions from power plants
The 3D-printed, high-performance material could help power plants generate more electricity while producing less carbon.
A smart collar to catch carbon dioxide leaks
A device created by Sandia engineers would help ensure captured carbon dioxide stays deep underground.
National Hispanic technical honor goes to Sandia engineer
Sandia data engineer Rudy Garcia wins the award from the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers for his work with large software systems and remote-sensing applications.
Successful sounding rocket campaign advances hypersonic weapon tech for Navy, Army
The vehicle spent about one minute above Mach 9 in a relevant altitude band, an unprecedented accomplishment for a sounding rocket.
Navigating when GPS goes dark
A team at Sandia envisions quantum inertial sensors as revolutionary, onboard navigational aids that could safely guide vehicles where GPS signals are jammed or lost.
Scientists chip away at a metallic mystery, one atom at a time
It’s no secret that radiation weakens metal. Sandia researchers are uncovering how.
Reinventing offshore wind turbines
Engineers at Sandia imagine a smaller, less expensive floating turbine and develop modeling software to set their idea in motion.