View allAll Photos Tagged electricalengineering

People sit in common areas in the Stata Center at MIT.

 

Photo: M. Scott Brauer

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

201-0302-01

 

4" x 4" Through Hole Board

  

3/4 of the board our signature offset traced rows of holes

1/4 of the board with untraced holes

Long enough for any DIP

Every 10th row, silk-screened to help with part placement

Two columns of power and ground strips

Easy ground connection to the mounting holes

PCB is scored to break in half if chosen

 

www.schmartboard.com/index.asp?page=products_th&id=279

 

In Oct 1820, the Dane, H C Øersted, had discovered that passing electric current through a wire produced a magnetic field – a compass needle was deflected. Michael Faraday reversed the process and created the first motor. Not a practical device but an experiment to show that that a magnet (left hand flask) would rotate around a wire carrying current and, equally that a wire carrying current would rotate round a magnet (right hand flask). In the picture, the vessels are full of mercury thus allowing the current to flow. All modern motors and generators rely on this discovery. Faraday also discovered that when two coils are wound on an iron ring a change in the flow of current in one produces a change in current in the other, this is the basis of the old-fashioned children's electric-shock coil. When a low voltage fed through a coil of a few turns is interrupted, it produces a very high voltage - but a safe low current - in another coil of many turns. This causes nasty but safe shocks. The same principle makes the plugs of a car spark.

This a photograph of Faraday’s original "Inductor" ring. The actual ring can be seen in the basement exhibition at the Royal Institution building.

 

STORM, 's werelds eerste elektrische toermotorfiets, ontwikkeld door studenten van de TU Eindhoven

foto: Bart van Overbeeke

STORM, world's first electric touring motorcycle, designed by students of TU Eindhoven.

 

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

eX. E l e t t r r o d r o x i u #3

Electrical Engineering students in James Formato's class.

Richard Williams, president of Shell WIndEnergy, left, with Engineering Dean David Wormley. Williams is a 1980 electrical engineering graduate. (Photo credit: Paul Hazi)

Students in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science work on a lab project to build a light-tracking "pet robot" in 6.01.

 

Photo: Dominick Reuter

(l-r) Venkatesh Prasad Ramachandra (Master of Science, Electrical Engineering '07) and Samuel Pursglove (Master of Science, Electrical Engineering '07) meet next to Tutor Hall. Photo by: Philip Channing

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

Mika Chen, Ankit Goila, Kris Schilling, and Yang Xu; Graduate Students, learn how to program and use an industrial manipulator robot arm in an EECS 567 section in the HH Dow Building on April 4, 2013.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing

 

www.engin.umich.edu

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

(l-r) Venkatesh Prasad Ramachandra (Master of Science, Electrical Engineering '07) and Samuel Pursglove (Master of Science, Electrical Engineering '07) meet next to Tutor Hall. Photo by: Philip Channing

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

1990 electrical engineering alumnus Richard Williams' brother at Nittany Lion Shrine.

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

B2B (Bunks 2 Buildings). This year, the Oregon National Guard re-built a pump house, greenhouse, and other buildings for the Horning Seed Orchard. This work helped them complete their required Annual Training (AT). More than 30 members of the Vertical Engineering Unit worked alongside journey-level engineers, plumbers, and electricians to gain valuable skills that they will use on an upcoming deployment.

electric girl dreams of electric sheep

Life is good at CSU! Engineering Spring Commencement, Colorado State University, May 15, 2009. CSU Photography: 04004_02078

QFP, 32 - 100 Pins 0.5mm Pitch, 2" X 2" Grid EZ Version

 

Support up to 100 pins QFP, TQFP, PQFP package IC with 0.5mm pitch, 20 pcs. of 0603 package, and some thru hole passive components. 6 ground holes are connected a copper plane on the bottom side.

 

This product utilizes the "EZ" technology to assure fast, easy, and flawless hand soldering

 

www.schmartboard.com/index.asp?page=products_qfp&id=70

Click the "All Sizes" button above to read an article or to see the image clearly.

 

These scans come from my rather large magazine collection. Instead of filling my house with old moldy magazines, I scanned them (in most cases, photographed them) and filled a storage area with moldy magazines. Now they reside on an external harddrive. I thought others might appreciate these tidbits of forgotten history.

 

Please feel free to leave any comments or thoughts or impressions... They are happily appreciated!

Mine telephone switchboard. Sobering that "Fire", "Amb[ulance]" and "Hosp[ital]" are marked - I presume those calls got made more often than they should.

No. 9 Coal Mine & Museum in Lansford, PA - this is inside the museum building, which was small but had some interesting artefacts on display.

Winter vacation to The Poconos, Feb 2009.

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Electricity Substation, Stainburn, Workington, Cumberland.

 

Pentax MX, 28mm lens, 100ASA positive film.

John N. Daigle, professor of Electrical Engineering, receives a Distinguished Professor Award. Photo by Kevin Bain/University Communications Photography.

Grad student Ezzeldin Hamed readies software radios used in research in the Wireless Center. Hamed works in Professor Dina Katabi's research group in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL).

 

Photo: M. Scott Brauer

Congratultions to @ucsandiego bioengineers and alumni, whose work on a new neuromorphic chip was published today in @nature_the_journal! You can learn more here: bit.ly/NeuRRAMchipNature

@ucsdalumni

#bioengineering #electricalengineering #AI #neuralnetworks #neuromorphiccomputing #semiconductors Pictures by David Baillot

so I'm still alive... :)

 

after graduating in December, I embarked on an epic quest to obtain a non-internship position at work, which turned out to be quite the quest. I finally landed a dream job, two months later, and only one month before the end of my internship.

 

my new job is in a hectic department that is really understaffed right now, which makes for no shortage of work. between 50 hour weeks, house work and the occasional evening of knitting, I haven't been in much of a Flickr mood lately.

 

that's all changed though with my shiny new camera (sadly, the D50 got stolen in a house break in...) I may even write a blog post too! (baby steps, baby steps...)

 

also, if you never saw the note on yarnnerd.com a bit ago, I'm not sure what will happen there in the future. for now, I definitely don't have the time to dye yarn, except for a few personal projects here and there. it's all good though, I'm just glad to have a job I love, and know someday I'll be a dyeing fiend again :)

 

so hi there! how's it going?

Joy Ekuta, a senior in Course 9, tests nurse call system equipment with Janet Gardner in Dorchester, Mass. Ekuta is helping to design a new nurse call system for Gardner, who has multiple sclerosis. Gardner's old system used a single button attached loosely to a wall, which she often dropped. The new system would involve more buttons, voice activation, and lights to let the patient know the button has been pressed and a call has been made. Here, Ekuta is testing a variety of button styles with Gardner to find one that she can easily press.

 

Photo: M. Scott Brauer

Graduate student Kimon Drakopoulos (in green) presents his work on the LinkedIn social network to members of Asuman Ozdaglar's (in red) research group in a lab in the Connection Science and Engineering Center.

 

Photo: M. Scott Brauer

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