The fleet of small white robots that have zipped around UW-Madison’s campus since 2019 to deliver dining hall food to students has been permanently powered down.
June 25, 2026
Campus life
UW Experts in the News
A primer on uranium enrichment as Iran’s nuclear program faces scrutiny
The most common way to enrich uranium is by spinning uranium gas in a centrifuge, where lighter U-235 separates from the heavier U-238. This is done in stages, using multiple centrifuges that enrich the uranium bit by bit.
The early stages are especially labor-intensive because there is so much more U-238 to strip away, said nuclear security specialist Sébastien Philippe at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Over time, the enrichment process gets easier.
UW-Madison Related
Meet the duo who will replace Larry Meiller on Wisconsin Public Radio
Rayburn, a UW-Madison graduate who got his start in radio in 2001 when John “Sly” Sylvester hired him at WTDY-AM, says he will bring his own personality to the chair with the “Lee Rayburn Show.”
Wisconsin Public Radio talk show host Larry Meiller signs off after 59 years behind the mic
A radio class in his final semester at UW-Madison changed his career and life trajectory, making Meiller one of the most beloved personalities in Wisconsin.