News
News releases older than 2015 can be found at the University's eCommons site.
Chemical and hardware manufacturers are seeking University of Dayton-industry research to examine whether drones are the answer to precision agriculture.
The University of Dayton has received $353,378 from the National Science Foundation to educate the next generation of researchers working on semiconductor materials and electronic and photonic devices.
JoAnna “Gigi” Walker transferred to UD last fall, unsure if there would be a place for her. When she saw a flier with a rainbow on it marketing a new group for LGBTQ+ STEM majors, she followed the rainbow to a pot of gold: a community.
Four faculty wrote for The Conversation while national media tapped a pair of others to comment on Pope Benedict XVI's legacy. Stars and Stripes picked up a Dayton Daily News story highlighting UD's Air Force partnerships.
In addition to University of Dayton Week on The Academic Minute, The Conversation, Chronicle of Higher Education, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Newsy and Discover featured UD faculty expertise or programs.
The Academic Minute featured English Professor Bryan Bardine's research on heavy metal scenes. Local media highlighted Christmas on Campus and the Greg and Annie Stevens Intelligent Infrastructure Engineering Lab.
Fourteen University of Dayton faculty and staff in six labs will be part of the Intel-funded Ohio-southwest Alliance on Semiconductors and Integrated Scalable Manufacturing to help develop a workforce for Ohio's semiconductor industry needs.
The Chronicle of Higher Education, National Catholic Reporter, American Psychological Association, American Society for Engineering Education and Ohio cable news outlet Spectrum News 1 are among those highlighting UD research and faculty expertise.
A University of Dayton research project to help U.S. defense agencies tune between radio frequency bands for communication, radar, satellites, and satellite radios earned Phase II funding from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
A University of Dayton researcher will lead a nearly half-million-dollar National Science Foundation project with the goal of developing a low-cost, hand-held device to test for and identify diseases and biohazards.