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Xu selected to receive a 2025 Packard Fellowship award

Xu selected to receive a 2025 Packard Fellowship award

announces the 2025 class of Packard Fellows.

Nicole Xu, assistant professor in the听Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering, has been selected as a recipient of the 2025 Packard Fellowships for Science and Engineering.

Established in 1988, the award provides some of the nation鈥檚 most promising early career scientists and engineers flexible funding to test novel ideas and lead research that drives real-world impact.听, who will each receive $875,000 over five years to explore new frontiers in their fields of study.

鈥淚鈥檓 excited to join this incredible cohort of Packard Fellows,鈥 said Xu, who is also affiliated with the听Robotics Program,听Biomedical Engineering Program and听BioFrontiers Institute at 桃色视频. "It鈥檚 a great opportunity to collaborate with people and learn from these brilliant scientists and engineers.鈥

听A history of Packard Fellows at 桃色视频

  • Xu is the 20th researcher from 桃色视频 to receive a Packard Fellowship.
  • She is the fifth researcher to represent CU Engineering as a Packard Fellow.

Xu leads an听 at the intersection of robotics, fluid dynamics and biology. She says the funding will help her team tackle issues related to climate, energy efficiency and even environmental stewardship.

鈥淭o address climate change, we need new, energy-efficient tools for ocean monitoring and exploration,鈥 Xu said. 鈥The Xu Lab leverages jellyfish as a model organism to design next-generation underwater vehicles using three approaches: engineered soft robots, cyborg systems enhancing live animals, and tissue-engineered constructs. Together, these methods offer complementary insights into propulsion.鈥

The Packard Fellowships were inspired by electrical engineer and former United States Deputy Secretary of Defense David Packard and his commitment to strengthening university-based science and engineering programs across the country. Since the fellowship鈥檚 inception, the Packard Foundation has awarded more than $500 million to support 735 scientists and engineers from 55 universities.

Over the years, Packard Fellows have made discoveries to help protect species, develop new vaccines and launch technologies that improve our daily lives. Many have gone on to receive some of the field鈥檚 highest honors, including Nobel Prizes in Chemistry and Physics and elections to the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important to invest in science now more than ever so that we can study fundamental research and applications in areas like AI and climate change,鈥 said Xu. 鈥淭he Packard Fellowship will provide my lab with crucial funding that will allow us to conduct high-risk, high-reward research.鈥

Nicole Xu portrait photo with black background and jellyfish circling her

鈥楥yborg jellyfish鈥 could aid in deep-sea research, inspire next-gen underwater vehicles

Assistant Professor Nicole Xu first became fascinated with moon jellyfish more than a decade ago because of their extraordinary swimming abilities. Today, Xu has developed a way to harness their efficiency and ease at moving through the water in ways that could make some types of aquatic research much easier.

artistic illustration depicting a robotic cockroach

We can turn bugs into flying, crawling RoboCops. Does that mean we should?

Scientists and engineers are modifying animals with mechanical parts to create next-generation biohybrid cyborg animals that can perform difficult and unappealing tasks for humans. But do humans have the right to overlook animal consciousness for personal gain? In this article by Salon, Assistant Professor Nicole Xu blazes this new terrain and explores the ethical considerations behind these biohybrid creatures using her jellyfish case study as an example.

Robotic jellyfish illustration

Meet 5 types of robots with living body parts

Living organisms have evolved across the span of millions of years to do things that are nearly impossible even for today's machines. But what happens when you combine biology and engineering to create more capable robots? Assistant Professor Nicole Xu shares her lab's efforts to create the next generation of cyborg jellyfish explorers.