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Graduate students display their research at the Graduate Research and Creativity Showcase. November 9, 2017

Colorado State University's College of Business celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

Students at Royal Roads University are getting support to pursue advanced degrees in priority areas like science and technology, thanks to a new $180,000 graduate student scholarship fund to boost research and innovation throughout the province.

 

The new merit-based scholarships, administered by Royal Roads University, are part of a $12-million investment that will support awards of $15,000 each for students pursuing graduate degrees in research-intensive or professional graduate-degree programs.

 

Read more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2018AEST0091-001282

Alan Overa, MSE PhD Student, and Pierre Ferdinand Poudeu-Poudeu, Associate Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, construct a stable copper selenide material in the H. H. Dow on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on September 29, 2017.

 

The material is made from a combination of copper, selenium and idiom, and is the first material that can turn waste heat into electricity. Applied to a hot pipe in a glass factory or metal processing plant, it only requires about half as much heat as previous generators to begin pumping out electricity.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Senior Multimedia Content Producer, University of Michigan - College of Engineering

Colorado State University's College of Liberal Arts celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

White Coat Ceremony

Langford Auditorium

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Vanderbilt University

Nashville, TN

 

Photo: Anne Rayner

Graduate students display their research at the Graduate Research and Creativity Showcase. November 9, 2017

Graduate students display their research at the Graduate Research and Creativity Showcase. November 9, 2017

Alan Overa, MSE PhD Student, and Pierre Ferdinand Poudeu-Poudeu, Associate Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, construct a stable copper selenide material in the H. H. Dow on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on September 29, 2017.

 

The material is made from a combination of copper, selenium and idiom, and is the first material that can turn waste heat into electricity. Applied to a hot pipe in a glass factory or metal processing plant, it only requires about half as much heat as previous generators to begin pumping out electricity.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Senior Multimedia Content Producer, University of Michigan - College of Engineering

Hispanic Michigan Engineering Graduate students worked to gather relief supplies for Puerto Rico in the Office of Student Affairs in the Chrysler Building on October 13, 2017 on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI.

 

The group was helping collect for a cross-campus organization known as Puerto Rico-Rises, co-founded by IOE Alumnus Rose Figueroa.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Senior Multimedia Content Producer, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing

Brandon Wong, Research Fellow, Civil and Environmental Engineering, remotely activates valves to control the flow of water throughout an 11 square mile area of Ann Arbor.

Wong and his team under Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Branko Kerkez created one of the most densely instrumented systems in the country. The experiment pushes the boundaries of what is achievable with the Internet of Water by using valves to instantly redesign these spaces collectively as a system ready to immediately adapt to unpredictable changes in storm patterns.

Photo by Robert Coelius

Multimedia Producer

Michigan Engineering

@UMengineering

Richard Youngblood, a second year PhD student in Biomedical Engineering at the University of Michigan, demonstrates the construction of a lung organoid PLG scaffold. This research was conducted partly in the lab of Lonnie Shea, the William and Valerie Hall Department Chair and Professor of Biomedical Engineering.

 

Photo: Evan Dougherty, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing

 

www.engin.umich.edu

Colorado State University's College of Business celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

This field course puts a new spin on “Rock Chalk Jayhawk”.

 

Brittney Oleniacz is a graduate teaching assistant for a geology course that takes students in the field across Kansas, Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming during a span of two weeks. At Skyline Drive in Colorado, Brittney spotted inverted casts of dinosaur footprints in Dakota Sandstone. The footprints were made during the Cretaceous Period, around 100 million years ago.

 

“While my research area is invertebrate paleontology, mainly fossil spiders, I can definitely appreciate the special circumstances that preserved these footprints.”

 

Brittney Oleniacz, second year PhD student and Department of Geology GTA

Studying: Paleontology

Instagram & Twitter: @theoleniacz

Michael Hamel, NERS PhD Student, uses a Microsoft Hololens headset to demonstrate use of augmented reality to detect the presence of nuclear weapons in the Nuclear Engineering Laboratory on June 21, 2017.

 

The technology is designed by the Consortium for Verification Technology (CVT) led by Sara Pozzi, NERS Professor. The CVT consists of twelve leading universities and nine national laboratories, working together to provide research and development needed to address technology and policy issues in treaty-compliance monitoring of nuclear weapons.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Senior Multimedia Content Producer, University of Michigan - College of Engineering

White Coat Ceremony

Langford Auditorium

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Vanderbilt University

Nashville, TN

 

Photo: Anne Rayner

Brandon Wong, Research Fellow, Civil and Environmental Engineering, remotely activates valves to control the flow of water throughout an 11 square mile area of Ann Arbor.

Wong and his team under Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Branko Kerkez created one of the most densely instrumented systems in the country. The experiment pushes the boundaries of what is achievable with the Internet of Water by using valves to instantly redesign these spaces collectively as a system ready to immediately adapt to unpredictable changes in storm patterns.

Photo by Robert Coelius

Multimedia Producer

Michigan Engineering

@UMengineering

Hispanic Michigan Engineering Graduate students worked to gather relief supplies for Puerto Rico in the Office of Student Affairs in the Chrysler Building on October 13, 2017 on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI.

 

The group was helping collect for a cross-campus organization known as Puerto Rico-Rises, co-founded by IOE Alumnus Rose Figueroa.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Senior Multimedia Content Producer, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing

White Coat Ceremony

Langford Auditorium

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Vanderbilt University

Nashville, TN

 

Photo: Anne Rayner

White Coat Ceremony

Langford Auditorium

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Vanderbilt University

Nashville, TN

 

Photo: Anne Rayner

White Coat Ceremony

Langford Auditorium

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Vanderbilt University

Nashville, TN

 

Photo: Anne Rayner

Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.

Graduate students display their research at the Graduate Research and Creativity Showcase. November 9, 2017

Juan Lopez, MSE Post-Doc, engineers magnetic transitions in ferromagnetic semiconductors in the H.H. Dow Building on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on June 21, 2019.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

Jacqueline Hannan, a PhD student in industrial and operations engineering, demonstrates walking with a lower-body exoskeleton at the Engineering Research Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan on Wednesday, April 6, 2022.

 

This is part of Man I (Maggie) Wu’s research. Wu, a PhD student in robotics, said the purpose of the investigations is to learn how people respond to lower-body exoskeletons. Specifically, she’s interested in times when the exoskeleton makes an error. The users' responses will then inform the development of future exoskeleton controllers to support human-exoskeleton coordination and fluency.

 

Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing

Leim Irish Dance, a student performance group, performs at the cultureXchange: Celebrating diversity through shared experience on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on November 8, 2017.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

Colorado State University's College of Business celebrates its graduates at the Spring Commencement. May 13, 2022

To bid farewell to the class of 2022, Berklee Valencia celebrated the commencement of the students in the following programs on July 4, 2022:

-Master of Music in Contemporary Performance (Production Concentration)

-Master of Art in Global Entertainment and Music Business

-Master of Music in Music Production, Technology, and Innovation

-Master of Music in Scoring for Film, TV and Video Games.

- Post-master's program

Photos by Tato Baeza and Vicente A. Jimenez.

White Coat Ceremony

Langford Auditorium

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Vanderbilt University

Nashville, TN

 

Photo: Anne Rayner

All photos provided are the property of Creative Services and may not be used without permission.

 

Please contact creative@jmu.edu if you are interested in using any photos included in our collection.

Students at Royal Roads University are getting support to pursue advanced degrees in priority areas like science and technology, thanks to a new $180,000 graduate student scholarship fund to boost research and innovation throughout the province.

 

The new merit-based scholarships, administered by Royal Roads University, are part of a $12-million investment that will support awards of $15,000 each for students pursuing graduate degrees in research-intensive or professional graduate-degree programs.

 

Read more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2018AEST0091-001282

Students at Royal Roads University are getting support to pursue advanced degrees in priority areas like science and technology, thanks to a new $180,000 graduate student scholarship fund to boost research and innovation throughout the province.

 

The new merit-based scholarships, administered by Royal Roads University, are part of a $12-million investment that will support awards of $15,000 each for students pursuing graduate degrees in research-intensive or professional graduate-degree programs.

 

Read more: news.gov.bc.ca/releases/2018AEST0091-001282

Male lonestar tick. (Photo courtesy of Krista Garner)

White Coat Ceremony

Langford Auditorium

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

Vanderbilt University

Nashville, TN

 

Photo: Anne Rayner

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