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LEADERS IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE SERIES

These are RealMedia webcasts. Please download the RealOne player

Friday, April 25, 2003
Lecture 8 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Ron Adrian, University of Illinois, "Vortex Organization in Wall Turbulence"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 Hour

Friday, April 18, 2003
Lecture 7 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Fred Gouldin, Cornell University

"Does Garbage In = Garbage Out?"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 hour, 11 minutes

Friday, April 11, 2003
Lecture 6 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Roger Howe, University of California, Berkeley

"Will MEMS Ever Really Matter to the Semiconductor Industry?"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 hour, 3 minutes

Friday, April 4, 2003
Lecture 5 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Gregory S. Chirikjian, Johns Hopkins University

"Mechanical Models of Conformational Transitions in Large Biomolecular Structures"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 59 minutes

Friday, March 14, 2003
Lecture 4 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Hratch Semerjian, NIST

"Metrology: Its Impact on the Economy, International Trade, and Quality of Life"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 hour, 12 minutes

[ Download the Powerpoint Slides ]

Friday, March 7, 2003
Lecture 3 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Lex Smits, Princeton University

"Turbulent Pipe Flow: The Law of the Wall and Why Moody was Wrong"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 52 Minutes

Wednesday, March 5, 2003
Guest Lecturer - Dr. Ajay Malshe
Professor, Mechanical Engineering Department at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

"Nanomanufacturing for Integrated Systems: Infusion of Nano-Micro-Bio, Opportunities and Progress"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 53 Minutes

Friday, February 28, 2003
Lecture 2 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Earl Dowell, Duke University

"Linear and Nonlinear Dynamics of Very High Dimensional Systems"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 57 Minutes

Friday, February 21, 2003
Lecture 1 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Arthur Bergles, University of Maryland and RPI

"Advanced Enhancement: Third Generation Heat Transfer, or 'The Final Frontier' ”

This seminar considers the many techniques that have been developed to enhance convective heat transfer, that is, to improve heat transfer performance. A summary is given of the techniques that are effective for the various modes of heat transfer, and are applied to thermal systems throughout the world - including cooling systems for microelectronics.

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 47 minutes

Thursday, February 6, 2003

Space Shuttle Technology Forum

The tragic loss of the Columbia and its crew has prompted a broad review of the technologies that underpin the shuttle and the manned exploration of space. At this Forum, Clark School faculty and research staff shared first hand experience and knowledge of these technologies and the trade-offs and risks inherent in the development of spacecraft. Following a series of brief presentations, the Forum opened for questions and comments from the audience.

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 hour, 49 minutes

 

LEADERS IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE SERIES

These are RealMedia webcasts. Please download the RealOne player

Friday, April 30, 2004
Lecture 4 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Joe Donndelinger, General Motors
University of Maryland, Department of Mechanical Engineering

Information Flow and Decision-Making in Advanced Vehicle Development.

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 Hour
[ Download the Powerpoint Slides ]

Friday, April 2, 2004
Lecture 3 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Robert Fischell, Professor of Practice, University of Maryland, Dept of Mechanical Engineering

"The Art and Science of Coronary Stents"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 Hour

Friday, March 12, 2004
Lecture 2 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Gerry Stokes, Joint Global Change Research Institute

"The Technological Challenge of Climate Change"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 Hour

Friday, February 13, 2004
Lecture 1 : Leaders in Mechanical Engineering Lecture Series
Richard Ulrich, Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Arkansas

"Embedded Passive Components: Keeping American Manufacturing One Step Ahead"

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 Hour

 

LEADERS IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE SERIES

These are RealMedia webcasts. Please download the RealOne player

May 6, 2005, 2pm
Resnick Auditorium (Room 1202), Glenn L. Martin Hall (Bldg. 088)
Maynard Hill

TRANSATLANTIC RADIO CONTROLLED MODEL FLIGHT
Abstract: On August 9, 2003, Maynard Hill launched a radio-controlled aeromodel at Cape Spear, Newfoundland. After 38 hours, 52 minutes and 14 seconds of non-stop flight, the model plane was landed at Mannin Beach, Ireland, on August 11. This flight was the first time a model aeroplane weighing less than 11 pounds had flown across the Atlantic Ocean.

[ Watch this Webcast ] : 1 Hour



April 29, 2005, 2pm
Resnick Auditorium (Room 1202), Glenn L. Martin Hall (Bldg. 088)
Prof. Subra Suresh, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, M.I.T.

CELL BIOMECHANICS AND HUMAN DISEASE STATES
Abstract: We explore coupling among mechanics, biology and medicine at the cell and subcellular levels by investigating: the molecular changes induced by invasion of parasites or from exposure to chemicals occurring naturally in the human body, the consequent changes in the mechanical response of the cell, and possible implications for disease progression. The two cases considered are: human red blood cells invaded by the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum and Panc-1 pancreatic cancer cells.

[ Watch this Webcast ] : 1 Hour

April 22, 2005, 2pm
Resnick Auditorium (Room 1202), Glenn L. Martin Hall (Bldg. 088)
Mitch Smooke, Strathcona Professor of Engineering at Yale University

Laminar, sooting, ethylene-fueled, coflow diffusion flames at atmospheric pressure have been studied experimentally and theoretically as a function of fuel dilution by inert nitrogen.

[ Watch this Webcast ] : 1 Hour

April 15, 2005, 2pm
Resnick Auditorium (Room 1202), Glenn L. Martin Hall (Bldg. 088)
Charles Harper

SOME PERSPECTIVES ON THE HISTORY OF ELECTRONIC PACKAGING

[ Watch this Webcast ] : 1 Hour

April 1, 2005, 2pm
Resnick Auditorium (Room 1202), Engineering Building
Prof. Yogesh Jaluria

BUOYANCY-DRIVEN FLOWS IN NATURAL AND PRACTICAL THERMAL PROCESSES

[ Watch this Webcast ] : 1 Hour

February 25, 2005, 2pm
Resnick Auditorium (Room 1202), Engineering Building
Dr. José M. Izquierdo

RISK ASSESSMENT AND PROTECTION ENGINEERING

[ Watch this Webcast ] : 1 Hour

February 10, 2005
Tsunami Open Forum

See more information and Powerpoint slides at this link : Tsunami

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 Hour 30 mins

February 18, 2005
Dr. Bar-Cohen Guest Lecture to University of Texas – Arlington

Challenges and Opportunities in the Thermal Management of Nanoelectronics
The rapid migration of microelectronics into nanoelectronics, with the consequent rise in transistor density and switching speed, has led to steep increases in die heat flux and power dissipation. In the absence of new and more aggressive thermal management techniques, nanoelectronic chips can be expected to experience rising average temperatures, on-chip “hot spots” and sharp temperature gradients, leading to accelerated failure rates and an overall loss in IC reliability and performance.

[ Watch This Webcast ] : 1 Hour 18 minutes
[ Download the Powerpoint Slides ]

 

LEADERS IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE SERIES

These are RealMedia webcasts. Please download the RealOne player

November 4, 2005, 2:30pm
Resnick Auditorium (Room 1202), Glenn L. Martin Hall (Bldg. 088)
Charles Steele, Stanford University

(Audio is missing for the first minute and a half)

Some Basic Mechanics of the Middle and Inner Ear

Abstract: Recent results for the eardrum indicate that nature has an interesting mechanical solution for the problem of a diaphragm that is effective across a wide frequency range. Following that will be a discussion of the function of the inner ear in transferring sound into neural excitation.

[ Watch this Webcast ] : 1 Hour



October 7, 2005, 2:30pm
Resnick Auditorium (Room 1202), Glenn L. Martin Hall (Bldg. 088)
Stephen B. Pope

ADVANCES IN THE COMPUTATION OF TURBULENT CHEMICALLY REACTIVE FLOWS
Abstract: Turbulent chemically reactive flows are prevalent in the chemical process industry, combustion, and elsewhere. Predictive computational tools are sought to aid in the design of reactive-flow devices, to improve performance, and to shorten the design cycle

[ Watch this Webcast ] : 1 Hour

 

LEADERS IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE SERIES

  • 4-21-2006
    Theoretical Studies of Flow Induced Coalescence in Viscous Liquids
    Gary Leal · University of California, Santa Barbara, Department of Chemical Engineering
    Original Air Date: Friday, April 21st at 2:00pm
  • 4-14-2006
    Assembly at the Nanoscale
    Ari Requicha, Ph.D. · University of Southern California, Director of the Laboratory for Molecular Robotics
    Original Air Date: Friday, April 14th at 2:00pm
  • 3-17-2006
    Ambient Intelligence Enabling Future Programmes in Personal Health and Sustainable Development
    Seán Cian Ó Mathúna · Tyndall National Institute
    Original Air Date: Friday, March 17th at 2:00pm
  • 2-24-2006
    Biomedical Heat Transfer: Multiscale Molecular, Cellular, and Tissue Level Phenomenon
    John Bischof, Ph.D. · University of Minnesota
    Original Air Date: Friday, February 24th at 2:00pm
  • 2-10-2006
    Direct Numerical Simulations of Multiphase Flow
    Grétar Tryggvason, Ph.D. · Professor & Department Head of Mechanical Engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute
    Original Air Date: Friday, Friday, February 10th at 2:00pm
  • 1-20-2006
    High Temperature Electronic Packaging
    Professor Wayne Johnson · Auburn University
    Original Air Date: Friday, January 20th at 2:00pm

 

LEADERS IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE SERIES

  • 12-15-2006
    The Practice of Engineering Complex Systems
    Rear Admiral Millard S. Firebaugh · USN Retired, Consultant
    Original Air Date: Friday, December 15th at 2:00pm
  • 12-08-2006
    Simulation of Accidental Fire and Explosions: Transition to Physics-Based Predictive Models
    Professor Adel Sarofim · University of Utah, College of Engineering
    Original Air Date: Friday, December 8th at 2:00pm
  • 11-03-06
    Multi-Scale Modeling Of Carbon Nanotube Atomic Force Microscopy Imaging: What You See Is Not Always What You Get
    Professor Santiago Solares · University of Maryland, Department of Mechanical Engineering
    Original Air Date: Friday, November 3rd at 2:00pm
  • 10-13-2006
    The Evolution of Contact Mechanics
    Professor Leon M. Keer · Northwestern University, Department of Mechanical Engineering
    Original Air Date: Friday, October 13th at 3:00pm
  • 10-06-2006
    Exciting Vibrations
    Professor David J. Ewins · Imperial College London
    Original Air Date: Friday, October 6th at 2:00pm
  • 9-22-2006
    Photomechanics Methods as Applied to Microelectronics Product Development Professor Bongtae Han · University of Maryland, Department of Mechanical Engineering
    Original Air Date: Friday, September 22nd, at 2:00pm

TRANSFORMING ENERGY LECTURE SERIES

  • 12-1-2006
    Science, Scientists and Our Energy Future
    Patricia Dehmer · DOE-Office of Science
    Original Air Date: Friday, December 1st at 2:00pm
  • 11-10-2006
    Hydrogen From Sunlight and Water: The Sustainable Hydrogen Economy
    John A. Turner, Ph. D. · National Renewable Energy Laboratory
    Original Air Date: Friday, November 10th at 2:00pm
  • 9-15-2006
    Transitioning to a Sustainable Energy Future
    Professor Jefferson Tester · MIT
    Original Air Date: Friday, September 15th at 2:00pm

 

LEADERS IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE SERIES

  • 04-27-2007
    Mechanics of Flexible Macroelectronics
    Teng Li - Mechanical Engineering Department, University of Maryland
    Original Air Date: Friday, March 27th at 2:00pm
  • 03-30-2007
    Virtual Engineering: Playing the Real Games
    Kenneth Mark Bryden - Interim Chair, Mechanical Engineering Department, Iowa State University
    Original Air Date: Friday, March 30th at 9:45am
  • 03-16-2007
    Origins of Irreversibility in Fluid Dynamics: Chaotic Particle Interactions and Chaotic Mixing
    Jerry Gollub - Haverford College/University of Pennsylvania
    Original Air Date: Friday, March 16th at 2:00pm
  • 03-02-2007
    Product Platform and Product Family Design Optimization: Challenges and Opportunities
    Timothy Simpson - Penn State
    Original Air Date: Friday, March 2nd at 2:00pm

TRANSFORMING ENERGY LECTURE SERIES

  • 04-20-2007
    Supercritical Fluids: Applications for Future Nuclear Plant Designs
    Michael Corradini - University of Wisconsin
    Original Air Date: Friday, April 20th at 2:00pm
  • 03-30-2007
    Energy Systems for A Carbon Constrained World
    Dr. Geo Richards - National Energy Technology Labs
    Original Air Date: Friday, March 30th at 2:00pm
  • 02-23-2007
    LNG: The Future of Gas
    Jon Bloom - Exxon Mobil
    Original Air Date: Friday, February 23rd at 2:00pm

 

LEADERS IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE SERIES

  • 09-21-2007
    Modeling Geologic Scale Multiphase Flow in Porous Media
    Amir Riaz - Stanford University
    Original Air Date: Friday, September 21st at 11:00am
  • 10-05-2007
    Fossil Fuel Based Electricity Generation in a Carbon Constrained World
    Jonas Beer - MIT
    Original Air Date: Friday, October 5th at 1:00pm
  • 10-19-2007
    Thermal Microsystems for Electronics Thermal Management across Multiple Scales
    Suresh V. Garimella - Purdue University
    Original Air Date: Friday, October 19th at 11:00am
  • 11-02-2007
    Medical Robotics Research at the Robotics, Automation, Manipulation, and Sensing (RAMS) Laboratory
    Jaydev Desai - Mechanical Engineering Department, University of Maryland
    Original Air Date: Friday, November 2nd at 11:00am
  • 11-09-2007
    Edge Detection using Separation and Decomposition of Scales
    Eitan Tadmor - Department of Mathematics, CSCAMM and IPST - University of Maryland
    Original Air Date: Friday, November 9th at 11:00am

TRANSFORMING ENERGY LECTURE SERIES

  • 10-09-2007
    Technologies for Secure and Sustainable Energy
    Steven E. Koonin - BP
    Original Air Date: Friday, October 9th at 3:00pm

 

LEADERS IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING LECTURE SERIES

  • 03-07-2008
    Shaking the Money Tree - Funding at NSF
    Judy Vance - NSF
    Original Air Date: Friday, March 7th at 2:00pm
  • 04-04-2008
    GM R&D Activities: From Global to Personal
    John A Cafeo - GMF
    Original Air Date: Friday, April 4th at 2:00pm
  • 04-11-2008
    Teaching Performance and Its Relationship to Research Performance
    Way Ku - Dean of Engineering at the University of Tennessee
    Original Air Date: Friday, April 11th at 10:00am
  • 04-11-2008
    Reliability and Yield of Microelectronics-Nano Products
    Way Ku - Dean of Engineering at the University of Tennessee
    Original Air Date: Friday, April 11th at 2:00pm
  • 04-18-2008
    Structural Features of the High Reynolds Number Turbulent Boundary Layer
    Joe Klewicki - University of New Hampshire
    Original Air Date: Friday, April 18th at 2:00pm
  • 04-25-2008
    Technology Landscape: Changes Ahead
    Bill Chen - ASE Inc.
    Original Air Date: Friday, April 25th at 2:00pm
  • 05-02-2008
    Product Design and Decision Making
    Deborah Thurston - University of Illinois
    Original Air Date: Friday, May 2nd at 1:30pm
  • 05-09-2008
    Gas-Liquid Interface Deformations in Thin Locally Heated Liquid Films
    Yulia Kabova, Russian Academy of Sciences - Novosibirsk, Russia
    Original Air Date: Friday, May 9th at 2:00pm

TRANSFORMING ENERGY LECTURE SERIES

  • 01-31-2008
    Plasmas for Energy Efficient Materials Processing
    Mark Kushner - Iowa State University
    Original Air Date: Thursday, January 31st at 2:00pm
  • 02-18-2008
    In Pursuit of the Ideal Fuel Cell Membrane: How Close are We?
    Peter N. Pintauro - Case Western University
    Original Air Date: Monday, February 18th at 2:00pm
  • 03-06-2008
    Powering Tomorrow Towards a Sustainable Energy Future
    Stuart Licht - University of Massachusetts Boston
    Original Air Date: Thursday, March 6th at 2:00pm

 

 

   

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