Roller coaster engineer Korey Kiepert joins WIRED to answer the internet's burning questions about roller coasters and the people who design them. How do roller coasters work? Who invented the first ...
With nothing but paper, tape, and a marble as a test vehicle, engineering students at Tyler ISD’s Career and Technology ...
A group of teenagers huddled around a table in the Augusta County Library on Thursday night, folding pieces of colorful paper. Laughing and talking, the students made chutes, funnels and twists to ...
The University at Buffalo’s Theme Park Engineering Club (UB TPEC) loaded up on coffee for the Toronto Metropolitan University (TMU) Thrill Design Competition. The three-day competition, hosted by ...
Idaho State University's College of Science and Engineering hosted its annual Bengal STEM Day on Thursday, welcoming more than 450 middle school and high school students.
Honestly, nothing quite says “I trust modern engineering” like strapping yourself into a high-tech roller coaster and letting physics do its thing. Roller coasters have evolved far past wooden jolts ...
The Falcons Flight ride at Six Flags Qiddiya City uses magnets to reach peak speeds of 155 mph. The record-breaking Falcons Flight roller coaster starts out slow, but don’t be fooled. Seconds into the ...