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Executive Master – Module 1 12 – 15 September 2017 Campus École polytechnique Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Jardani Fatme et Mariam Ezzedine du Laboratoire de Physique des Interfaces et des Couches Minces (LPICM)

 

Mariam Ezzedine and Fatme Jardali are two postdoc researchers at LPICM, Ecole Polytechnique. They both hold a PhD degree in Physics from Ecole Polytechnique in 2017. Ezzedine and Jardali are the co-founders of the future start-up HIPERSSYS, taking actions to make their vision a reality and devoting their full time for the creation of the company.

HIPERSSYS targets to fundamentally change the way we power our world by the implementation of breakthrough lithium ion (Li-ion) battery technology. HIPERSSYS is developing advanced hybrid nanostructured electrode architectures that enable fabrication of Li-ion batteries with theoretical specific energies that are five times higher than that of today commercial Li-ion batteries. So, imagine the impact this technology can have not only on what is in one’s pockets or hands, but on the global energy economy as a whole!

HIPERSSYS won the first edition of the innovative competition “i-PhD” and the prestigious Jean Louis Gerondeau- Safran prize in 2020.

  

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Natation

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Laboratory of Photonics and Quantum Measurements

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, EPFL

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology

Lever du soleil sur le campus de l'Ecole polytechnique

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Portrait de Hervé LE BRAS

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Fabien SZMYTKA Professeur Associé Responsable du parcours Mobilité Intelligente et Ingénierie des Véhicules

ENSTA Paris | Institut Polytechnique de Paris

 

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

 

Terre @ Terre

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Laboratoire d'Optique et Biosciences

Ecole Polytechnique CNRS UMR7645 - INSERM U1182

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Jardani Fatme et Mariam Ezzedine du Laboratoire de Physique des Interfaces et des Couches Minces (LPICM)

 

Mariam Ezzedine and Fatme Jardali are two postdoc researchers at LPICM, Ecole Polytechnique. They both hold a PhD degree in Physics from Ecole Polytechnique in 2017. Ezzedine and Jardali are the co-founders of the future start-up HIPERSSYS, taking actions to make their vision a reality and devoting their full time for the creation of the company.

HIPERSSYS targets to fundamentally change the way we power our world by the implementation of breakthrough lithium ion (Li-ion) battery technology. HIPERSSYS is developing advanced hybrid nanostructured electrode architectures that enable fabrication of Li-ion batteries with theoretical specific energies that are five times higher than that of today commercial Li-ion batteries. So, imagine the impact this technology can have not only on what is in one’s pockets or hands, but on the global energy economy as a whole!

HIPERSSYS won the first edition of the innovative competition “i-PhD” and the prestigious Jean Louis Gerondeau- Safran prize in 2020.

  

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Jardani Fatme et Mariam Ezzedine du Laboratoire de Physique des Interfaces et des Couches Minces (LPICM)

 

Mariam Ezzedine and Fatme Jardali are two postdoc researchers at LPICM, Ecole Polytechnique. They both hold a PhD degree in Physics from Ecole Polytechnique in 2017. Ezzedine and Jardali are the co-founders of the future start-up HIPERSSYS, taking actions to make their vision a reality and devoting their full time for the creation of the company.

HIPERSSYS targets to fundamentally change the way we power our world by the implementation of breakthrough lithium ion (Li-ion) battery technology. HIPERSSYS is developing advanced hybrid nanostructured electrode architectures that enable fabrication of Li-ion batteries with theoretical specific energies that are five times higher than that of today commercial Li-ion batteries. So, imagine the impact this technology can have not only on what is in one’s pockets or hands, but on the global energy economy as a whole!

HIPERSSYS won the first edition of the innovative competition “i-PhD” and the prestigious Jean Louis Gerondeau- Safran prize in 2020.

  

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Laboratory of Photonics and Quantum Measurements

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, EPFL

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology

Laboratory of Photonics and Quantum Measurements

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, EPFL

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology

Répétition du défilé du 14 juillet 2015 à Satory

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Deux étudiants dans le couloir des laboratoire

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Solar Impulse is a Swiss long-range solar powered aircraft project being undertaken at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. The project eventually hopes to achieve the first circumnavigation of the Earth by a piloted fixed-wing aircraft using only solar power. The project is led by Swiss psychiatrist and aeronaut Bertrand Piccard, who co-piloted the first balloon to circle the world non-stop, and Swiss businessman André Borschberg.

 

Piccard initiated the Solar Impulse project in 2003. By 2009, he had assembled a multi-disciplinary team of 50 specialists from six countries, assisted by about 100 outside advisers. The project is financed by a number of private companies. The four main partners are Deutsche Bank, Omega SA, Solvay, and Schindler. Other partners include Bayer MaterialScience, Altran, Swisscom and Swiss Re (Corporate Solutions). Other supporters include Clarins, Semper, Toyota, BKW and STG. The EPFL, the European Space Agency (ESA) and Dassault have provided additional technical expertise, while Bay Area based SunPower provided the aircraft's photovoltaic cells.

 

solarimpulse.com/

Incorporation de la promotion 2018 X 2018 Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Jardani Fatme et Mariam Ezzedine du Laboratoire de Physique des Interfaces et des Couches Minces (LPICM)

 

Mariam Ezzedine and Fatme Jardali are two postdoc researchers at LPICM, Ecole Polytechnique. They both hold a PhD degree in Physics from Ecole Polytechnique in 2017. Ezzedine and Jardali are the co-founders of the future start-up HIPERSSYS, taking actions to make their vision a reality and devoting their full time for the creation of the company.

HIPERSSYS targets to fundamentally change the way we power our world by the implementation of breakthrough lithium ion (Li-ion) battery technology. HIPERSSYS is developing advanced hybrid nanostructured electrode architectures that enable fabrication of Li-ion batteries with theoretical specific energies that are five times higher than that of today commercial Li-ion batteries. So, imagine the impact this technology can have not only on what is in one’s pockets or hands, but on the global energy economy as a whole!

HIPERSSYS won the first edition of the innovative competition “i-PhD” and the prestigious Jean Louis Gerondeau- Safran prize in 2020.

  

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Badminton

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

New building on the EPFL* campus in Ecublens/Lausanne, canton of Vaud, Switzerland.

 

*Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology).

 

Shot with Alpa 10d and "P. Angenieux Paris" Alpa Retrofocus 28mm f/3.5 lens on Kodak Portra (new) ISO-160 film.

Sortie équestre aux abords du lac de l'Ecole polytechnique

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Néolithe : un procédé de transformation des déchets ménagers non recyclables en granulats minéraux utilisables dans les travaux publics. Projet porté par Nicolas Cruaud (X 2016), William Sr Cruaud, William Jr Cruaud (Université de Technologie de Compiègne) et Clément Bénassy (AgroParisTech). Au sein d'X-UP, l'incubateur de l'École polytechnique, Néolithe développe une technologie de transformation des déchets ménagers non recyclables (tissus, plastiques, restes alimentaires...) en granulats minéraux utilisables dans le BTP, notamment dans les sous-couches routières et avec une application potentielle dans le béton. Naturellement écologique, ce procédé breveté qui repose sur la fossilisation des déchets, permet d'éviter l'incinération et l'enfouissement et ainsi, de limiter de 80 % les émissions de CO2 traditionnellement liées à ces traitements. Mise en place à l'échelle nationale, cette technologie représenterait une réduction de 5 % de l'impact carbone français et ce, à un coût comparable à celui des procédés actuels. Créée en janvier 2019, cette start-up familiale a lancé une chaîne de production pilote pour tester le procédé industriel et le business model. Elle développe également des « usines containers » transportables qui devraient être livrées en mars 2020. « Au-delà de la dotation financière qui l'accompagne et qui va nous permettre de financer la phase de R&D et d'industrialisation de notre procédé avant sa mise sur le marché, ce prix nous apporte de la légitimité et de la crédibilité. Cela nous donne également confiance, surtout lorsque que l'on regarde le parcours des entrepreneurs qui ont reçu ce prix avant nous. Nous espérons rencontrer le même succès qu'eux », témoigne Nicolas Cruaud (X 2016).

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

 

neolithe.fr

See also: Vigil honouring Dec 6 massacre

 

The London Women's Monument was dedicated on December 6, 1994— the 5th anniversary of the Montréal L’Ecole Polytechnique femicide. It was a tragedy that brought home to many Canadians—and to women around the world—the reality of violence and abuse women face as they pursue their education in fields traditionally dominated by men. It was an attack on feminism — fuelled by misogyny that continues to plague our society today.

 

The monument was put in place to remember and reflect on the loss of the young women, as well as to honour and cherish the memory of all women who have suffered or lost their lives to gender-based violence.

 

32 years later, gender-based violence is as pervasive in Canada as it is around the world, more so since the beginning of the covid-19 pandemic. In most cases, it is violence committed by men against women, and violates a woman’s fundamental right to safety and dignity.

 

Despite the steps forward, the roots of hate, misogyny and sexism that motivate femicide remain, and is encountered everywhere: at home, at work, at school, in politics, patriarchy, and religion; and online & offline through pornography, social media, and other digital platforms; and can take many forms in blatant or insidious ways: a demeaning comment, a snide joke, a surreptitious photo posted online without a woman's consent. Women continue to face harassment, sexual assault, abuse and violence every day.

 

We must protect progress. The work to eradicate sexism, sexual assault, gender violence, & misogyny is far from done.

At particular risk are Indigenous, Black, and newly immigrant women, women with disabilities, and women in rural and remote regions.

 

Everyone has the right to live without fear, without violence, without harassment. We must continue to challenge, educate, & inform all citizens to take action against violence committed against women & girls. It is essential to support and increase funding to organizations working with marginalized women, including-Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls: Calls for Justice

 

Men and boys are a vital part of the solution to change attitudes and behaviours that allow for this violence to exist.

 

Coordinates: 42° 59.385′ N, 81° 14.983′ W

  

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Chercheur du laboratoire d'hydrodynamique de l'Ecole Polytechnique (LadHyx), qui éxamine une puce microfluidique développée au laboratoire permettant d'analyser finement un échantillon biologique.

Laboratory of Photonics and Quantum Measurements

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, EPFL

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Incorporation de la promotion 2017 X 2017 Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande)

Incorporation de la promotion 2018 X 2018

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Jardani Fatme et Mariam Ezzedine du Laboratoire de Physique des Interfaces et des Couches Minces (LPICM)

 

Mariam Ezzedine and Fatme Jardali are two postdoc researchers at LPICM, Ecole Polytechnique. They both hold a PhD degree in Physics from Ecole Polytechnique in 2017. Ezzedine and Jardali are the co-founders of the future start-up HIPERSSYS, taking actions to make their vision a reality and devoting their full time for the creation of the company.

HIPERSSYS targets to fundamentally change the way we power our world by the implementation of breakthrough lithium ion (Li-ion) battery technology. HIPERSSYS is developing advanced hybrid nanostructured electrode architectures that enable fabrication of Li-ion batteries with theoretical specific energies that are five times higher than that of today commercial Li-ion batteries. So, imagine the impact this technology can have not only on what is in one’s pockets or hands, but on the global energy economy as a whole!

HIPERSSYS won the first edition of the innovative competition “i-PhD” and the prestigious Jean Louis Gerondeau- Safran prize in 2020.

  

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Graduation ceremony of the Master of Science and Technology , class of 2019

 

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

IP Paris presented a workshop "Tech the Challenge for Society" on Friday, 17 June - 10:30 am at VivaTech 2022.

 

Presentations by Eric Labaye, president of Institut Polytechnique de Paris, Nicolas Glady VP Innovation of IP Paris, Sylvain Cros from Centre interdisciplinaire Energy4Climate (E4C), Elsa Angelini from the upcoming Center on #Biomedical engineering, Titus Zaharia from the upcoming Center on Arts, Science & Society and Marie-Paule Cani from the Hi! PARIS Center - AI for Society .

 

© Institut Polytechnique de Paris - (photographer: Jérémy Barande)

Executive Master – Module 1 12 – 15 September 2017 Campus École polytechnique Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Cours magistral de Nicoló CESA-BIANCHI Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Incorporation de la promotion 2018 X 2018

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Wizkid, Prototype, 2006-08

Martino d'Esposito (Swiss/Italian, b. Cyprus 1976)

Frédéric Kaplan (French, b. 1974) of CRAFT Laboratory (Centre de Recherche et d'Appui pour la Formation et ses Technologies) (est. 2002), École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland, est. 1853)

 

To switch on a Wizkid, you just have to look at it. "Wizkids do not speak," explain d'Esposito and Kaplan, "but they pay a lot of attention to what happens around them. When set in autonomous mode, Wizkids become curious about their environment and start learning by themselves." A Wizkid will learn to recongize its user and his or her habits and to react to different contexts and situations. It will help with cooking and shopping; it will take pictures of guests at a party; it will play games with the kids; at the office, it will be a valuable executive assistant. Users monitor a Wizkid's progress through visualization tools and improve its learning curve through special toys and educational kits.

 

Design and the Elastic Mind, on exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art from February 24-May 12, 2008, explores the reciprocal relationship between science and design in the contemporary world by bringing together design objects and concepts that marry the most advanced scientific research with attentive consideration of human limitations, habits, and aspirations. The exhibition highlights designers’ ability to grasp momentous changes in technology, science, and history—changes that demand or reflect major adjustments in human behavior—and translate them into objects that people can actually understand and use.

 

*

 

The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) was founded in 1929 and is often recognized as the most influential museum of modern art in the world. Over the course of the next ten years, the Museum moved three times into progressively larger temporary quarters, and in 1939 finally opened the doors of its midtown home, located on 53rd Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues in midtown.

 

MoMA's holdings include more than 150,000 paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, photographs, architectural models and drawings, and design objects. Highlights of the collection inlcude Vincent Van Gogh's The Starry Night, Salvador Dali's The Persisence of Memory, Pablo Picasso's Les Demoiseels d'Avignon and Three Musicians, Claude Monet's Water Lilies, Piet Mondrian's Broadway Boogie Woogie, Paul Gauguin's The Seed of the Areoi, Henri Matisse's Dance, Marc Chagall's I and the Village, Paul Cezanne's The Bather, Jackson Pollack's Number 31, 1950, and Andy Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans. MoMA also owns approximately 22,000 films and four million film stills, and MoMA's Library and Archives, the premier research facilities of their kind in the world, hold over 300,000 books, artist books, and periodicals, and extensive individual files on more than 70,000 artists.

Innovation & Research Symposium Cisco and Ecole Polytechnique 9-10 April 2018 Artificial Intelligence & Cybersecurity

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Innovation & Research Symposium Cisco and Ecole Polytechnique 9-10 April 2018 Artificial Intelligence & Cybersecurity

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

Innovation & Research Symposium Cisco and Ecole Polytechnique 9-10 April 2018 Artificial Intelligence & Cybersecurity

Crédit photographique : © École polytechnique - J.Barande

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