View allAll Photos Tagged ElectricalEngineering
Electronic microscopic image of a nanoforest, or “3D branched nanowire array.” Green tint added for contrast. Image Credit: Wang Research Group, UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering.
David Packard Electrical Engineering Building on the Stanford University campus, Palo Alto, CA.
Shot with Fuji X-M1 and Vivitar 24mm f/2.8 M42 lens on screw-mount to Alpa mount adapter paired to a metabones Speed Booster adapter in Alpa mount to Fuji-X mount.
The helicity of a laser beam can be used to control magnetization where sweeping a polarized laser writes "CMMR" for the Center for Magnetic Recording Research at UC San Diego. The dark gray indicates one magnetization orientation, while the light gray indicates an opposite orientation.
A better pic of my custom order bracelet taken by the new owner, it looks amazing on her! Thanks for this pic!
Qty. 100 5" Male to Female Jumpers
"These jumpers are perfect for using SchmartBoards in conjuction with Breadboards"
"Jumpers can be daisy chained to make longer lengths"
Testing out exposure and focus on an old USB document camera for use while teaching electrical engineering via Zoom. The device demonstrated is a rather convoluted way to show 1+1=10: a 4-bit binary calculator constructed using only electromechanical relays, mechanical toggle switches and incandescent bulbs, powered by SIX size D batteries. It is an electric (rather than electronic) calculator that can only add numbers and the largest calculation it can complete is 15+15=30, or 1111+1111=10000. I built this 5 years ago as an absurd demonstration of binary arithmetic and thermodynamics of computations. #binarycalculator #binary #calculator #electricalengineering #teachingfromhome #zoomteaching
Cal Poly EE Senior Project 2011 Showcase
Cal Poly Electrical Engineering Spring Senior Project Showcase
"The seniors apply the theory which they have learned in class to a practical experiment in the Electrical Engineering lab."
L-Book, 1957. p. 63