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Jasem Alhumaidi, president of Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honor society, grabs parts of the steel bridge that he participated in the construction competition on Friday, May 4, 2018 in Chico, Calif. Jasem is also an international student, a Kuwait native, who followed in the footsteps of two of his siblings by attending Chico State. His sister is also a civil engineering grad, and his brother a College of Business grad.
(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU Chico)
In its 22nd year, the Engineering Expo is the college’s premier community outreach event. On average, the college welcomes more than 1,500 K-12 students from Miami-Dade and Broward County schools (elementary, middle, and high school) to the FIU Engineering Center to engage with FIU student organizations, researchers and staff, and to discover the endless possibilities of pursuing a degree in engineering or computing.
James Camp, a just-graduated chemical engineering student from Georgetown, Tex., spent three undergraduate semesters working with tissue engineering pioneer Dr. Christine Schmidt. Schmidt’s research team is pursuing various avenues of research to coax severed nerves to re-grow.
New completed side tipping trailers, for QUBE BULK, MLG OZ and MGM BULK.
The pink livery MGM BULK, combination seen in the yard, is indicated on the back, as 60 metre in length road train.
The developers have great big tables with unassigned seating, so we can move around and sit next to whomever we're working with. That black wall in the background is for the systems engineers to test various meters.
From left to right: Everett Poisson (Thayer External Relations), Ted Sumers, Francis Wang, Erica Chueng, Henry Danaher, Joyce Chung, Grayson Zulaf, Sam Williams, Bernie Roseler, Kayla Davidson, Cody Engle-Stone, Mark Van-Eeghen, James Christy, Craig McConnell, Andrew Wong, and Holly Wilkinson (Thayer Career Services).
Students visited eight companies and Stanford University to learn about possible career paths.
James Gruich (chemical engineering) is doing a co-op at Ford’s Research and Innovation Center. “I do the cutting, grinding and polishing of part samples that need to be analyzed under optical or electron microscope. I am also working on individual research projects while I am here."
Brookes has an impressive range of specialist facilities for many different subject areas, from mechanical engineering and motorsport to health and social care.
Rodrigo Hernandez (civil engineering) is a construction intern with Lansing-based Great Lakes Engineering Group, LLC, working on the I-75 rebuilding project in Monroe. “I have learned that calculations, when it comes to the design of a structure, are critical. They go through many revisions and checks involving multiple engineering tiers to ensure the safety of the proposed structure.”
Camp attendees work on their own interpretations of a design/build project for the Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering portion of Discover Engineering on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Thursday, July 28, 2022.
Discover Engineering summer camp is designed for Michigan Engineering alumni and the children in their life entering 8th – 10th-grade who want to thoroughly explore various engineering disciplines. Through discussion, hands-on exercises, tours, and Q&A, professors and graduate students will help campers discover the many possibilities that exist for engineers.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Site of future bioengineering building at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Taken from the 4th floor of the Davidson Library.
Mark Moldwin, the Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, Professor of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering, introduces camp attendees to some of the possibilities available in his field during Discover Engineering on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Thursday, July 28, 2022.
Discover Engineering summer camp is designed for Michigan Engineering alumni and the children in their life entering 8th – 10th-grade who want to thoroughly explore various engineering disciplines. Through discussion, hands-on exercises, tours, and Q&A, professors and graduate students will help campers discover the many possibilities that exist for engineers.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
I don't know if this place is in business or not. It looks to be in much better shape than it's neighbors, yet the area on the building's side is so overgrown I'm not sure if it was once a parking lot or a grassy area.
6th graders from Cardigan Mountain School for boys tackle an engineering challenge in Couch Project Lab. The assignment: build a tower with spaghetti.
Photo by Catha Lamm.
U.S. AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. -- Cadets in the Field Engineering Readiness Laboratory here practice their welding skills June 5, 2013. The three-week lab allows cadets to apply lessons from the previous semester's engineering classes in an operational environment. (U.S. Air Force photo/Raymond McCoy)
Engineering students with their robot 'Sheba' from L-R: Yekini Wallen-Bryan, Ritesh Reddy, Danielle Gilman, Ikechukwu Ojuro.
Lauren Czerniak, an industrial operations and engineering PhD student, explains parameters to camp attendees about make their way through a series of obstacles as they experiment and learn how to examine a human flow issue, in this case in a hospital scenario, to determine which choices improve the most positive outcomes for the most people during Discover Engineering on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Thursday, July 28, 2022.
Discover Engineering summer camp is designed for Michigan Engineering alumni and the children in their life entering 8th – 10th-grade who want to thoroughly explore various engineering disciplines. Through discussion, hands-on exercises, tours, and Q&A, professors and graduate students will help campers discover the many possibilities that exist for engineers.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
www.stvincent.edu | Photos of Saint Vincent College’s 14th annual Pasta Bridge Engineering Contest for local high school students. The competition aims to increase the awareness of high school students about the role engineering plays in their lives and the career opportunities in the field while providing an opportunity for students to collaborate on the design and construction of bridges in a fun and engaging way.
Competitors will include students representing nine local high schools: Apollo Ridge, Franklin Regional, Greensburg Central Catholic, Greensburg Salem, Hempfield Area, Jeannette, Norwin, Penn-Trafford and Yough.
The event is co-sponsored by the Carbone family, DeLallo Italian Marketplace, Pantalone Funeral Home, Michael Baker International, Gibson-Thomas Engineering, The Engineers Society of Western Pennsylvania – The International Bridge Conference, Kennametal, Mine Safety Authority (MSA) and Saint Vincent College’s Herbert W. Boyer School of Natural Sciences, Mathematics and Computing.
The Mechanical Engineering and Production Technology degree programme will equip you with knowledge of modern engineering and the skills needed in the increasingly international working environment.
Mechanical Contractor required the hoist and removal of three 125 ton compressed oxygen bullet tanks. The constraints of the site allowed for the lift of the tanks by a Manitowoc 16000 with the optional "hanging" Max-er counterweight. Total load on the soil in excess of 1-1/2 Million pounds.
I designed the mat foundation for the crane.
In its 22nd year, the Engineering Expo is the college’s premier community outreach event. On average, the college welcomes more than 1,500 K-12 students from Miami-Dade and Broward County schools (elementary, middle, and high school) to the FIU Engineering Center to engage with FIU student organizations, researchers and staff, and to discover the endless possibilities of pursuing a degree in engineering or computing.
Camp attendees look on as Marcel Chlupsa, a material sciences and engineering PhD student, demonstrates the how heat affects metals during Discover Engineering on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Thursday, July 28, 2022.
Discover Engineering summer camp is designed for Michigan Engineering alumni and the children in their life entering 8th – 10th-grade who want to thoroughly explore various engineering disciplines. Through discussion, hands-on exercises, tours, and Q&A, professors and graduate students will help campers discover the many possibilities that exist for engineers.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Located in the Tri-Cities Science and Technology Park, the Applied Process Engineering Laboratory (APEL) is a permitted high-bay incubator and business development center that will help new chemical and materials processing enterprises pilot technologies and make the critical transition from laboratory to marketplace.
For more information, visit www.pnl.gov/news/
Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, "Courtesy of Pacific Northwest National Laboratory." Please use provided caption information for use in appropriate context.
Postcard of the Engineering Shops. On the front: "Engineering Shops M.A.C." Stamped on the back: "Aug 31 1920."
Date Unknown
Repository Information:
Michigan State University Archives & Historical Collections, 101 Conrad Hall, East Lansing, MI 48824, archives.msu.edu
Subjects:
Michigan State University -- Buildings -- Engineering Shops
Resource Identifier: A000945.jpg
Camp attendees work on their own interpretations of a design/build project for the Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering portion of Discover Engineering on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Thursday, July 28, 2022.
Discover Engineering summer camp is designed for Michigan Engineering alumni and the children in their life entering 8th – 10th-grade who want to thoroughly explore various engineering disciplines. Through discussion, hands-on exercises, tours, and Q&A, professors and graduate students will help campers discover the many possibilities that exist for engineers.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
At the A Computer’s Heart workshop students, like William Oak center, were challenged to see if they could come up with a sequence of instructions that would allow a computer to be unbeatable at tic-tac-toe on the second day of Xplore Engineering in the Bob and Betty Beyster Building on North Campus on Friday, July 1, 2022, in Ann Arbor.
In the workshop students took a closer look at a computer’s hardware and processors, and learned how computers are used to create applications and artificial intelligence.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing