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Shivam Patel, a masters student in computer engineering, holds up part of the “train” that precedes the cubesat Patel and his team designed as they and three other teams prepare to launch four cubesats as part of AEROSP 495 and 740 classes at the Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis, Michigan on Tuesday morning, December 6, 2022.
The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Tim Galmiche, left and Shun-Yu Yang, both masters students in space engineering, make last minute adjustments to their team cubesat before launch as part of James Cutler’s AEROSP 495 and 740 classes at the Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Tuesday morning, December 6, 2022.
After final adjustments Cutler and his students drove to Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis to launch the cubesats, which would then be carried in the stratosphere eastward to approximate just east of Tecumseh.
The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Aerospace Engineering Associate Professor James Cutler, center, speaks with students as they unload helium tanks and prepare to launch four cubesats as part of AEROSP 495 and 740 classes at the Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis, Michigan on Tuesday morning, December 6, 2022.
The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Cole Helsel, left, and Hunter Sagerer, both undergraduates in aerospace engineering, as they and three other teams prepare to launch one of four cubesats as part of AEROSP 495 and 740 classes at the Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis, Michigan on Tuesday morning, December 6, 2022.
The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Will Moll, left to right, a masters student in aerospace engineering, Tim Galmiche, a masters student in space engineering, Rohan Madathil, a masters student in aerospace engineering, and Shun-Yu Yang, a masters student in space engineering, make last minute adjustments to their team cubesat before launch as part of James Cutler’s AEROSP 495 and 740 classes at the Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Tuesday morning, December 6, 2022.
After final adjustments Cutler and his students drove to Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis to launch the cubesats, which would then be carried in the stratosphere eastward to approximate just east of Tecumseh.
The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
View of University of Michigan students launching balloons as part of James Cutler’s AEROSP 495 and 740 classes from Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis, Michigan on Tuesday, December 6, 2022.
The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.
Photo: Levi Hutmacher/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Autumn Tedrow, a senior business administration major with a moinor in finance and economics, is working with Keybank as a summer intern.
View of University of Michigan students launching balloons as part of James Cutler’s AEROSP 495 and 740 classes from Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis, Michigan on Tuesday, December 6, 2022.
The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.
Photo: Levi Hutmacher/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Aerospace Engineering Associate Professor James Cutler, right, speaks with students as they unload helium tanks and prepare to launch four cubesats as part of AEROSP 495 and 740 classes at the Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis, Michigan on Tuesday morning, December 6, 2022.
The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Rajiv Govindjee, center, a masters student in aerospace engineering, and others make last minute adjustments to their team cubesat before launch as part of James Cutler’s AEROSP 495 and 740 classes at the Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Tuesday morning, December 6, 2022.
After final adjustments Cutler and his students drove to Plumb Lake County Park near Sturgis to launch the cubesats, which would then be carried in the stratosphere eastward to approximate just east of Tecumseh.
The goal of the courses is to give students the opportunity to design and build complex satellite-like flight vehicles. The high-altitude balloons, which are filled with helium, rise into the stratosphere emulating some key aspects of spaceflight. According to Graduate Student Instructor Gage Bergman, "The stratosphere is an extreme environment, it experiences vast temperature differences, and also requires students to develop robust and reliable systems because once a balloon is released, there is no way to retrieve it - just like actual spaceflight.” Bergman is a masters student in aerospace engineering.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Autumn Tedrow, a senior business administration major with a moinor in finance and economics, is working with Keybank as a summer intern.
Members of the MRacing Team cheer as they break the seal during demolding at the and other members of the team work on demolding at the Wilson Student Team Project Center on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Thursday evening, February 2, 2023.
The demolding process took hours keeping students at the Wilson until after 10 p.m. The Winter term is always one of the busiest times of year at the Wilson Center as student teams move from theoretical design into production in preparation for competition season.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Autumn Tedrow, a senior business administration major with a moinor in finance and economics, is working with Keybank as a summer intern.
Autumn Tedrow, a senior business administration major with a moinor in finance and economics, is working with Keybank as a summer intern.
Heather Hare, left to right, George Zhou, both undergraduates in materials science and engineering, prepare to pour the metal into a mold under the direction of professor Tim Chambers in the MSE Advanced Lab in the Herbert H. Dow Engineering Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Friday afternoon, February 17, 2023. The floor of the lab where the pour will happen has a layer of sand on it to protect it in case of spills.
The Advanced Lab is home to MSE 360, a course about structural materials used for building everything from vehicles to buildings and beyond. In the first half of the course, students learn standard alloys before moving into design. MSE 360 is an opportunity to gain experience in both theory and application.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Autumn Tedrow, a senior business administration major with a moinor in finance and economics, is working with Keybank as a summer intern.
Encaustic Beeswax Painting for Beginners OR Intermediate/Advanced Level workshops
Encaustic is an artistic hot wax painting process used in ancient times and is now enjoying a revival in the past fifteen years, especially in Europe. Come and work with the most exciting, brilliant, vibrant colours you will ever see in any paint. Working with an encaustic iron, electric stylus, heat gun, brushes, found objects and various scratching-in tools, you will work on a variety of papers and surfaces. Encaustic Artist, Lorna Kemp, will guide you through learning many amazing techniques unique to this medium so you can choose your favorites and apply them to a masterpiece project. This is a beginner-level course geared to a first-time encaustic artist’s learning.
M • Jul 16 • 9am–4pm Beginner level
Tu • Jul 17 • 9am–4pm Intermediate/Advanced level
This is one of many steps in making papyrus paper (part of an Egyptian unit study we did as part of homeschool).
Sophia is making a rebozo as part of a unit study using Josephina (one of the American Girl dolls). The study included learning about New Mexico, Mexico, hispanic culture and arts, Native Americans who live in the SW U.S., Native American art and culture, cooking, music, deserts (animals, cacti), goats, clothing, and history. This was a very hands-on and fun unit.