RSS Feed Source: Academic Keys

The University of Louisville’s Department of Mechanical Engineering invites applications from outstanding candidates in the broad area of Energy for a tenure-track position at the level of an Assistant Professor. Potential areas of interest include (but are not limited to): Sustainable Energy Systems, Thermal-fluid Sciences for Energy Storage and Conversion, Electrochemical Processes, Additive Manufacturing of Energy-Relevant Materials, Autonomous Materials Design, and Artificial Intelligence for Efficient Energy Systems. Candidates must have a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering (or a closely related field) and a sustained, excellent track record in research. We are seeking a scholar with strong potential to build a nationally recognized research program, secure consistent external funding, and provide outstanding teaching at both the undergraduate and graduate levels, while also contributing to university service.

The J.B. Speed School of Engineering (SSE) encompasses seven academic departments.  Mechanical Engineering is the largest, with approximately 550 undergraduates,

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RSS Feed Source: Academic Keys

The University of Louisville’s Department of Mechanical Engineering invites applications from outstanding candidates for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level. Areas of research interest are broadly in the realms of Robotics, Automation, and Advanced Manufacturing, including potential specializations in Robotic Manipulation and Control, Robotic Prosthetics/Exoskeletons, Human-Robot Interaction, Intelligent Robotic Manufacturing, Hybrid Process Metal Additive Manufacturing (DED-CNC, etc.), Human-in-the-Loop Control, Artificial Intelligence for Control, Soft Robotics, or Distributed Robotic Sensors and Autonomous Vehicle Artificial Intelligence.

Candidates must have an earned Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering (or a closely related field) and a strong record of scientific research, demonstrating the capacity to develop a nationally recognized research program, obtain consistent extramural research funding, excel at undergraduate and graduate education, and contribute meaningfully to the service requirements of the University Louisville.  The successful candidate will also be expected to collaborate with the Louisville Automation and Robotics

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The U.S. National Science Foundation Directorate for Technology, Innovation and Partnerships (NSF TIP) on Friday announced the launch of a new initiative designed to launch and scale a new generation of independent research organizations. These organizations will focus on technical challenges and bottlenecks that traditional university and industry labs cannot easily solve on their own. NSF seeks feedback on this initiative through a Request for Information (RFI).

“As scientific challenges have become more complex and dependent upon the work of cross-disciplinary teams of experts, our nation must expand its scientific funding toolkit to adapt,” said Erwin Gianchandani, NSF TIP Assistant Director. “Tech Labs will provide entrepreneurial teams of proven scientists the freedom and flexibility to pursue breakthrough science at breakneck speed, without needing to frequently stop and apply for additional grant funding with each new idea or development.”

The NSF TIP Tech Labs initiative is grounded in the recognition that many of the technology acceleration and translation challenges of today require new approaches with coordinated, interdisciplinary teams to achieve success. The Tech Labs initiative will support full-time teams of researchers, scientists, and engineers who will enjoy operational autonomy and milestone-based funding as they pursue technical breakthroughs that have the potential to reshape or create entire technology sectors. Tech Labs teams will move beyond traditional research outputs (e.g., publications and datasets), with sufficient resources, financial

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RSS Feed Source: Academic Keys

In-brief analysis

December 12, 2025

In our latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, we forecast U.S. crude oil production will average 13.5 million barrels per day (b/d) in 2026, about 100,000 b/d less than in 2025. This forecast decline in production follows four years of rising crude oil output. Production increased by 0.3 million b/d in 2024 and by 0.4 million b/d in 2025, mostly because of increased output in the Permian Basin in Texas and New Mexico. In 2026, we forecast modest production increases in Alaska, the Federal Gulf of America, and the Permian will be offset by declines in other parts of the United States. We forecast that the West Texas Intermediate crude oil price will average $65 per barrel (b) in 2025 and $51/b in 2026, both lower than the 2024 average of $77/b.

Principal contributor:

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