In The News
- Journal of Experimental Biology, "Insect Wings Flip for Free", 18 January 2008
- Harvard Gazette, "Studying How Animals Do the Locomotion", 13 December 2007
- Physics World, "The Hydrodynamics of Dragonflies", November 2007
- Connecting with Cornell, "The Lure of Dragonflies", Spring/Summer 2007
- SIAM News, "Falling Paper and Flying Business Cards", May 2007
- Cornell Chronicle, "On the wings of dragonflies: Flapping insect uses drag to carry its weight, offering insight into intricacies of flight", 19 February 2006
- Electronics Weekly, "Dragonflies inspire wing design in flying robots", 2 March 2006
- Cover of Physical Review Letters, "Falling Paper: Navier-Stokes Solutions, Model of Fluid Forces, and Center of Mass Elevation", 1 October 2004
- Cornell Daily Sun, "Cornell Physicists Solve 'Falling Paper Problem", 26 October 2004
- Cornell News Service, "Why thin, flat things rise and glide on the way down: Cornell physicists finally solve the falling-paper problem", 18 October 2004
- ScienceNow Online, "How autumn leaves get a lift", 22 October 2004
- Physics World, "Passive-flight simulator", November 2004
- The Guardian Unlimited (UK), "The facts of fluttering", 4 November 2004
- Slashdot.org, "Physicists Finally Solve the Falling-Paper Problem", 31 October 2004
- 武汉大学非生物专业生物学教学网站 [Wuhan University] (China), "秋叶飘舞的秘密", 27 October 2004
- The Guardian (UK), "Float like a butterfly", 5 June 2003
- Cornell Engineering Magazine, "The Truth about Bumblebees and other insects", Summer 2002
- Physics Today, "Simple mechanisms help explain insect hovering", December 2000
- Science, Editors' Choice, "Flying in two dimensions", 22 September 2000
- The Hindu, India, "Miniature flying machines", 21 September 2000
- Nature, Science Update, "Hover craft", 11 September 2000
- NRC (Netherlands), "Een 8 voor vliegen", 26 August 2000
- New Scientist, "How flying insects reap the whirlwind", 1 April 2000
- Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, "Program on Physics of Hydrodynamic Turbulence", 12 June 2000
