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In an effort to draw a more diverse student population
to engineering schools and foster a more diverse engineering
workforce, Dean Ilene Busch-Vishniac is leading
a team that will develop plans to revamp undergraduate
engineering education. Through a planning grant from
the GE Fund, Dr. Busch-Vishniac is bringing together
colleagues from academe, industry, and the non-profit
sector to redesign the engineering curriculum to help
achieve this goal. One key objective is to develop a
curriculum that allows students to enter engineering
programs at various academic levels, rather than just
at the freshman level. Achieving this project goal will
require finding ways to partner academic institutions
with industry and professional societies. The plan,
to be developed by the end of 2003, will also look at
ways to put emphasis on the diverse career fields and
opportunities available to today's engineering school
graduates.
Computer Science assistant professor
Subodh Kumar is leading a team of colleagues
from the Krieger School of Arts & Sciences and
the Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) to develop a
virtual cuneiform library. The team, which also includes
Computer Science assistant professor Jonathan Cohen,
will develop a 3-D online library that allows researchers
access to highly detailed images of an international
collection of cuneiform tablets. Cuneiform is the
world's first written language; the clay tablets they
are inscribed on first appeared in Mesopotamia around
3200 B.C. "The challenge is that once you go
to a higher resolution of images, you have to make
sure the computers can handle that much data,"
says Dr. Kumar, "we're talking terabytes."
The imaging library is being designed to process data,
generate an image, and manipulate that image in 3-D,
a process that will take just one-fifteenth of a second.
"The goal of this project is to eliminate the
need to physically travel to a museum or to sites,"
to study cuneiform tablets. Funding for this project
comes from a National Science Foundation grant of
$1.55 million.
Associate professor Timothy
Weihs in Materials Science and professor Omar
Knio in Mechanical Engineering have formed a new
company, Reactive NanoTechnologies, to market and
sell a bonding method they developed with nano-structured
foil. This layered foil allows metal and ceramic to
be joined without using large outside heat sources-a
feat not previously possible. Their new bonding method
will be useful in the manufacturing of nanotechnology-based
products in such industries as aerospace and microelectronics.
For more information click
here.
Assistant
professor Benjamin Schafer in Civil Engineering
has developed a software program to test the stability
and safety of thin-walled structures, including buildings
and bridges, before construction begins. This modeling
software will help designers determine how and under
what conditions structural components will buckle.
The software, CUFSM, is available to the public on
Dr. Schafer's Web site. Click
here.
Researchers
in Biomedical Engineering, led by assistant professor
Jennifer Elisseeff, are making progress in
creating a minimally invasive procedure to repair
injured bone or cartilage. This multidisciplinary
tissue engineering team is conducting experiments
that have turned stem cells from adults into cartilage-like
tissue. Because the stem cells used in Dr. Elisseeff's
research are from adults, in theory, patients preparing
for cartilage or bone repairs will be able to donate
their own stem cells prior to the procedure. Though
the research is years away from being tested on humans,
the idea involves injecting a fluid filled with stem
cells and nutrients into damaged tissue and then using
light to harden the liquid into a stable gel, which
will allow the cells to multiply and form new cartilage
or bone. For the full story click
here.
Professor Michael Miller,
Director of the Center for Imaging Science, with joint
appointments in Biomedical Engineering and Electrical
and Computer Engineering, was recognized this summer
as garnering the highest increase in total citations
in the field of engineering, in the ISI Essential Science
Indicators rankings. Dr. Miller's most-cited paper is
"Deformable templates using large deformation kinematics,"
(IEEE Trans. Image Processing 5[10]: 1435-47, October
1996). An interview describing Dr. Miller's research
is available here.
| WSE
Departments Change Leadership: |
In
Chemical Engineering professor Michael Betenbaugh
is taking the helm as chairman, as Michael Paulaitis
steps down. "Mike is extremely well prepared to
lead the Department as we develop a Hopkins biology-based
chemical engineering program that will be unique to
chemical engineering academia," says Dr. Paulaitis.
A Hopkins professor since 1995, Dr. Betenbaugh's research
interests include genomics, recombinant DNA biotechnology,
biopharmaceuticals, metabolic engineering, insect and
mammalian cell culture, glycosylation engineering, and
cell death processes.
The
Civil Engineering Department bid a fond farewell this
summer to chairman Nick Jones, who made the move to
the University of Illinois-Champaign. Professor Robert
Dalrymple, who joined the Whiting School this
summer, is serving as the new chair of Civil Engineering.
"Tony has an energetic and innovative vision
of civil engineering research and education,"
says assistant professor Ben Schafer of Civil Engineering.
Most of Dr. Dalrymple's career has been with the University
of Delaware, where he founded and headed the Center
for Applied Coastal Research beginning in 1989. He
also served as both assistant dean of the College
of Engineering and acting chair of the Department
of Civil Engineering during his tenure there. No stranger
to Hopkins, Dr. Dalrymple spent a year as a visiting
professor here at the Whiting School in 1999. His
research interests include coastal engineering, water
wave mechanics, fluid mechanics, littoral processes,
and tidal inlets. Many on campus may already know
his wife, Dr. Candice Dalrymple, who is JHU's Associate
Dean and Director of the Center for Educational Resources
at the MSE Library.
In
the Department of Geography and Environmental Engineering
(DoGEE) chairman Marc Parlange is taking sabbatical
leave through August 2003 at the Swiss Federal Institute
of Technology (EPFL) in Lausanne, Switzerland. In
his absence, professor Benjamin Hobbs will
take the helm as department chair. With Hopkins since
1995, Dr. Hobbs' research includes the development
and application of systems analysis and economic methods
to analyze energy, water, and environmental problems.
"I know Ben will do much to continue the strong
momentum DoGEE has gained over many years as a leading
program addressing multidisciplinary environment issues,"
says Dr. Parlange. Dr. Hobbs takes on this role having
just returned from sabbatical leave at Energieonderzoek
Centrum Nederland in The Netherlands.
In
Mechanical Engineering, Dr. K.T. Ramesh is stepping
down as chair and is taking a one-year sabbatical
at Cambridge University, furthering his research on
phenomena at the nano-scale. Professor Shiyi Chen,
who joined Hopkins in 1999 as an expert in computational
fluid dynamics (CDF) methodologies, is serving as
the new department chair. "Shiyi is an outstanding
scholar with administrative experience in his prior
position as the Deputy Director for the Center for
Nonlinear Science at Los Alamos National Laboratory,"
says Dean Ilene Busch-Vishniac. Dr. Chen's research
interests are broad, and include turbulence, computational
fluid dynamics, lattice Boltzmann applications, molecular
dynamics, and flow in porous media. Practical applications
of his research include solving problems ranging from
the flow of oil and water through sandstone (oil extraction),
to flow over and around tires and automobiles for
industry partners, and the complex flow patterns of
granular materials, such as sand or snow.
The JHU Information Security Institute
is hosting a seminar featuring Dr. Peter Freeman, NSF's
Assistant Director for Computer & Information Science
& Engineering. Dr. Freeman will speak about the
National Academies' report on "The Role of Science
and Technology in Countering Terrorism." All are
welcome to join on Thursday, October 17, 2002, from
12:00 to 1:00 p.m. at 101 Mattin Center (Homewood Student
Arts Center) on the Homewood Campus. For additional
information and a full listing of fall seminars for
the Information Security Institute, click
here.
Research
Funding Available through UTDF Program
Research grants for the development
of promising technologies at Maryland universities
are being offered through the University Technology
Development Fund (UTDF), managed by the Maryland Technology
Development Corporation (TEDCO). Established in January
2001, nineteen projects have been funded for nearly
$1 million to-date. Under this program, another $1
million is currently available for new proposals.
For more information visit: www.MarylandTEDCO.org
or contact Lani Hummel in the WSE Office of Research
at: lhummel@jhu.edu
(410-516-5262).
| Part-time
Programs (PTE): |
A corporate partnership allows the
PTE Programs to cross state lines....PTE is pleased
to announce that it has added the MITRE Corporation
to its growing list of companies now taking advantage
of its on-site, part-time engineering (PTE) and applied
science programs. Starting in December, PTE faculty
members will travel to MITRE's Bedford, Massachusetts
facility to deliver the Master of Science in Systems
Engineering program to a cohort group of 20 MITRE professionals.
To strengthen the partnership and ensure that the programs
fully meet the needs of the MITRE students, each class
will include a MITRE employee as co-instructor. PTE
started its corporate partnership program in 1999. Since
that time, numerous partnerships have been formed with
corporations and government agencies located across
the region and country, including Maryland, Virginia,
and New Hampshire. For more information on PTE corporate
partnerships, contact Jim Teesdale at: jim.teesdale@jhuapl.edu
(240-228-6252).
PTE is very pleased to announce
the opening of our Student Services Center
at the Dorsey education center in Elkridge, Maryland.
In addition to classrooms and computer labs, the Dorsey
Center will now house admissions and registration
staff previously located at two other PTE sites (Homewood
and APL), and will also serve as a central point of
access for academic advising and financial services.
The Dorsey Center is located at 6810 Deerpath Road,
Elkridge, MD 21075 and our staff can be reached at
410-540-2960. For further information, please visit
the PTE website.
| Students
on the Cutting Edge: |
Congratulations
to graduate student Aaron Lazarus, in Civil
Engineering, for winning a National Defense Science
and Engineering Fellowship (NDSEG). This fellowship
covers the academic year and comes with a $23,000
award that will enable Aaron to conduct an experimental
study of the added-mass and radiation damping of dihedral
hull sections in waters of finite depth.
Also
in Civil Engineering, congratulations to graduate
student Cheng Yu, who received a $5,000 fellowship
from the Metal Building Manufacturers Association
(MBMA). The fellowship will enable Cheng to continue
his experimental and computational studies on the
local and distortional buckling behavior of C and
Z shaped cold-formed steel bending members.
Finally,
congratulations are also in order for Civil Engineering
junior Sam Phillips who received a JHU Provost's
Undergraduate Research Award to conduct research on
the application of genetic and evolutionary algorithms
to the optimization of thin-walled structural members.
Whiting School faculty and researchers
are encouraged and greatly needed to participate in
this year's What is Engineering? Fair, which
showcases the many aspects of engineering taught here
at Johns Hopkins. The fair, sponsored by HeadsUP-the
Whiting School's summer program that offers introductory
engineering courses to high school students in Montgomery
County-will be held on Friday, December 6, from 3
to 7 p.m. WSE departments and research centers along
with a number of corporate organizations will display
their exhibits, manned by engineers and researchers.
Last year 400 visitors, over 200 of them students,
learned more about engineering as a career choice
by talking with "real live engineers" as
well as from the many exhibits on engineering. Please
call or e-mail Richard Scott, Director of HeadsUP,
at: headsup@jhu.edu
(301-294-7070), or visit
the HeadsUP Web site.
The Society of Engineering
Alumni (SEA) council and committees will be meeting
on Saturday, October 12, 2002, during the Johns Hopkins
Alumni Leadership weekend. If you'd like to learn
more about the Society of Engineering and how you
can get involved please contact Megan Howie at megan@jhu.edu
The SEA Career Night will
be held on Wednesday, October 30, 2002. This event
offers the opportunity for students and alumni to
network and gives students a chance to hear first-hand
about the job market from engineering alumni. If you
would like to participate or would like additional
information please contact Megan Howie at megan@jhu.edu
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