Image with headshots of six men in suits with the words 2025 Chancellor’s EDGES Fellows.

Six faculty from the College of Engineering were awarded the prestigious Chancellor’s EDGES fellowship honoring their significant contributions to their disciplines.

Separate bins with discarded smartphones, tablets, and circuit boards.

The rare earth elements mined from discarded electronics could improve the U.S. supply chain.

A man wearing a cycling jersey and helmet shows his wrist device to Dr. Sasangohar in a white Texas A&M shirt at a cycling event. Other cyclists and bikes are visible in the background.

Researchers will introduce a breakthrough wearable device for PTSD management at the 2025 Project Hero Texas Challenge.

Three people standing in a lab.

As space travel becomes more common, the need to reuse spacecraft will rise. The solution may be spacecraft that sweat.

A satellite in Earth’s orbit with meteors headed towards it and a close-up of a self-healing polymer in action.

Material scientists at Texas A&M have developed a dynamic material that self-heals after puncturing by changing from solid to liquid and back.

Two people working at a computer.

Dr. Yang Shen is using machine learning and artificial intelligence to understand disease mechanisms and facilitate therapeutics.

A man wearing a blue suit stands in a modern building, holding a book titled Sustainable Design: Global Perspectives.

The third edition of a book by Dr. Mahmoud M. El-Halwagi compiles more than four decades of research on manufacturing processes and focuses on how facilities can enhance efficiency.

Two men standing in front of lab equipment.

Researchers at Texas A&M University collaborated with industry to develop a new technique to improve efficiency and performance in computer processors.

Multiple blue-colored bacteria with flagella.

Dr. Pushkar Lele received a National Institute of General Medical Sciences research grant to investigate how bacteria sense their mechanical environment.

A man in a suit.

Dr. Ali Mostafavi was honored with the Walter L. Huber Civil Engineering Research Prize for his research on AI and civil infrastructure resilience.