OSU
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING E-BULLETIN
Issue #28
Week of May 8,
2006
BEST OF LUCK to the OSU SAE
MINI BAJA TEAM in this week’s
MINI BAJA
WEST COMPETITION
Portland (May 11—static
events) and Washougal, WA
(May 12-13—dynamic events and endurance race)!
For more
information about the event,
including maps and directions, visit
http://minibajawest.com/. Fans attending the Friday/Saturday events should
look for the black and orange Beaver Racing trailer!
Attention all
ME grad students and current and incoming pro-school students:
The Mechanical Engineering 10th
Annual Awards Ceremony and Picnic is coming
up next week! Plan to take part in this fun evening of food, games,
and celebration on Thursday, May 18 at 5 pm,
at the Avery Park Lyons
Shelter. This is the time when we celebrate you and your
accomplishments, and even hand out a
few awards! Faculty will be barbecuing hamburgers,
veggie burgers, hotdogs, and all of the trimmings,
and that’s just part of the fun! If you plan to attend, please RSVP
to: karen.willard3@oregonstate.edu by May
15.
Attention all
graduating PhD and Masters students and ME seniors:
The Mechanical Engineering
Department is holding Commencement on Saturday, June 17,
at 4 pm in LaSells Stewart Center's Austin Auditorium. If you plan to
attend—and we hope that you will!!—please RSVP at the following link:
http://me.oregonstate.edu/springpicnic.php.
The invitation extends to any and all family members – no limit.
UPCOMING EVENTS
This Week...
Monday, May 8: Formula SAE group meeting, 6 pm, Rogers 132.
Tuesday,
May 9: “Vision-Based Control of Autonomous Flight Vehicles in
Urban Environments.” Talk by Richard (Chad)
Prazenica,
University of Florida. 9 am, Rogers
226.
Tuesday, May 9: Oregon WAVE/Grand Challenge Team
meeting, 12 noon, basement of Graf. All
students (graduate and undergraduate) welcome.
Tuesday, May 9: SAE Mini Baja Senior
Design meeting, 5–6 pm, Rogers
230.
Tuesday, May 9: Computer Science
Workshop: “Scalable PHP.” 7–7:50 pm,
Milne 201.
Wednesday, May 10: “National
Center for Accessible
Transportation: Overview of Research Activities.” Presentation
by Katherine Hunter-Zaworski and Joe Zaworski,
sponsored by the Center for Healthy Aging. 1–2 pm,
Bates Hall 129. Free and open to the public.
Thursday, May
11–Saturday, May 13: 2006 SAE Mini Baja
West Competition, Portland, OR (May 11) and Washougal,
WA (May 12-13).
Thursday,
May 11: OSU
Solar Vehicle Team (SVT) meeting,
5:30 pm in MU 211, and SVT
Machine Shop time, 6 pm in WNGR
404.
Friday,
May 12: “The Why and How
of Optimal Traffic Control.” ME Seminar
presentation by Lei Zhang, OSU
Department of Civil, Construction, and Environmental Engineering. 4 pm, Rogers 226 (social time w/coffee and tea
starts at 3:30 pm).
Sunday,
May 14: Mothers Day!!
Plan Ahead...
Monday, May 15: Women and Minorities in
Engineering invite you to a celebration
of Freshman and Sophomore Undergraduate Research. 5–6 pm, Kelley
Engineering Center
Atrium. Free and open to the public--family and future students are welcome and
encouraged to attend. Appetizers, Kelley Center
tours, and Segway scooter rides!
Research projects are sponsored by Tektronix and Intel. RSVP by May 10 to Ellen Momsen at
541-737-9699 or Ellen.momsen@oregonstate.edu. We hope to see you there.
Thursday, May 18: Annual ME Spring Picnic
and Awards Ceremony for current and incoming
pro-school students, graduate
students, faculty, and staff. Avery Park Lyons Shelter, start time 5 pm. If you plan to attend, please RSVP
to: karen.willard3@oregonstate.edu by May 15th.
Thursday,
May 18:
CoE Brown-Bag Lunch Presentation: “The Impostor Syndrome” by
Valerie Young. 12 noon, Owen 102. Free
and open to all CoE students, staff, and faculty.
Do you secretly worry that others will find out you're not as
intelligent and competent as they seem to think you are? Do you often dismiss
your accomplishments as a "fluke" or "no big deal?" Do you
sometimes shy away from challenge because of nagging self-doubt? Join us at
this lunchtime presentation to learn about the so-called Impostor Syndrome and
how it operates in every day life; how race,
class, and gender can and do contribute
to feelings of fraudulence; and how to stop the perfectionism, procrastination,
and chronic self-doubt standing between you and your goals.
NOTE: In
addition to this lunch time CoE meeting,
the Women and Minorities in Engineering Office,
in collaboration with Willamette SWE,
OSU Office of Community and Diversity,
and OSU SWE, are hosting a free evening meeting at 6:30 pm in LaSells, CEM room for students and community members. Both
presentations will be geared to all ages and genders. For more information on
the Imposter Syndrome, visit http://www.impostorsyndrome.com/.
Friday, May 19: Last day to withdraw from spring term classes; last day
to change to S/U grading.
Friday, May 19: OSU Engineering Expo, 2–5 pm Kelley Engineering
Center.
Wednesday, May 24: First Annual Building
Your Future in Higher Education Conference.
Formerly the Graduate Student Conference,
our re-vamped event boasts an exciting new format with outstanding professional
development opportunities and a free lunch for the first 275 participants
who register. This conference is
open to all OSU students, graduate
and undergrad. For more details and to register,
visit http://asosu.oregonstate.edu/taskforces/grad_reg.php. or contact David
McCandless at graduate.affairs@oregonstate.edu
or 737.3559. Registration deadline: May 17th.
Wednesday,
May 24: CoE
faculty meeting with President Ed Ray and Provost Sabah Randhawa, 2:30-4 pm in Owen 101. All CoE faculty, including professional faculty, are invited to attend. See Announcements section
(below) for details.
Wednesday, May 24–Saturday, May 27. 2006
SAE Mini Baja Midwest Competition,
Walworth County, WI.
Friday, May 26: “What Are We Doing at the Industrial
Assessment Center?”
Presentation by Joe Junker,
IAC Assistant Director, 4 pm, Rogers
226.
Thursday, June
15-Saturday, June 17: Formula SAE West
Competition at California Speedway, Fontana, CA.
Saturday, June 17: ME
Graduation Ceremony, This
ceremony will be held at 4–6 pm in the Lasells Stewart Center, and will include individual recognition of
each graduate. Caps and gowns are required. RSVP at the following link: http://me.oregonstate.edu/springpicnic.php. This invitation
extends to any and all family members – no limit.
FACULTY/GRADUATE SEMINARS
Tuesday,
May 9: “Vision-Based Control of Autonomous Flight Vehicles in
Urban Environments.” Talk by Richard (Chad) Prazenica, Department of Mechanical & Aerospace
Engineering, University of Florida.
9 am, Rogers 226.
ABSTRACT: This presentation will describe some
of the challenges associated with operating autonomous flight vehicles in urban
environments. A particular scenario will be discussed in which the objective is
to enable a micro air vehicle to fly autonomously to a goal location in an
unknown urban environment. This scenario presents unique and interesting
challenges in such areas as image processing,
estimation, and control. The
vision-based control architecture considered in this line of research requires
several enabling technologies. Feature point tracking is required to identify
and track points of interest in image frames collected from the onboard camera.
The tracked feature points are used as measurements in a Kalman filter for
vehicle state estimation. The positions of static points in three-dimensional
space can be computed from estimates of the vehicle motion and the positions of
tracked feature points in the image plane. An adaptive,
multi resolution-based learning algorithm is used to reconstruct the
three-dimensional scene from the collection of static points in the
environment. The reconstructed scene provides obstacle avoidance constraints
for a locally-optimal path planning algorithm that guides the vehicle towards
the goal location. A standard waypoint controller can be used to fly the
vehicle through the path points provided by the trajectory planner. An
alternative approach will also be discussed in which the path planning and
control are combined into a single process. In this case,
a path is not planned explicitly,
but rather a sequence of locally-optimal control inputs are computed that
result in a desirable trajectory. These algorithms will be described in detail
and demonstrated via simulations conducted in the UF-REEF Visualization
Laboratory.
Friday,
May 12: “The Why and How
of Optimal Traffic Control.” ME Seminar
presentation by Lei Zhang, OSU
Department of Civil, Construction, and Environmental Engineering. 4 pm, Rogers 226 (social time w/coffee and tea
starts at 3:30 pm).
ABSTRACT: During the past two decades, the US has adopted a transportation
investment policy that increasingly emphasizes the optimal control and
management of existing facilities. Optimal freeway traffic control has emerged
as an important theoretical and practical issue. At present, virtually all major urbanized areas in the US employ
systems of sensors, control devices, and algorithms for freeway operations at varying
degrees of sophistication. A fundamental supposition for freeway traffic
control is that the control algorithms result in increased capacity and
throughput. However, the validity of
this assumption is in question. In 2000,
in what may be one of the largest field transportation experiments in recent
years, the Twin Cities
(Minneapolis-St. Paul) freeway management system was shut down for two months to
study the system’s effectiveness. Traffic data collected before and after the
shut-down experiment have enabled a true before-after study on the impact of
freeway traffic control on freeway capacity. Results from an empirical study of
27 sites also help advance the theory and practice of real-time freeway traffic
control through ramp metering. A novel linear-programming (LP) formulation for
ramp control was developed based on those empirical findings. The LP solutions
suggest that the most efficient control logic is also the least equitable one
and requires a small number of drivers to endure excessive delays to benefit
others. This conclusion casts an interesting trade-off problem between
efficiency and equity for decision makers. The LP formulation with different
equity considerations is tested in a microscopic traffic simulator to address
this trade-off issue.
Note: The most current ME Seminar schedule and other OSU seminar
information is available on the Rogers Hall bulletin boards near the ME main
office or at http://me.oregonstate.edu/seminars/.
MISCELLANEOUS ANNOUNCEMENTS
Department-wide…
STUDENTS: REGISTER YOUR VOTE FOR OUTSTANDING
CoE PROFESSOR! Each
year the College
of Engineering selects a
professor to receive the Carter Award. This award is a reward for outstanding
undergraduate teaching. The basis for selection is student voting. For accurate
results, it is important that you
indicate each engineering professor from whom you have taken a class and the
professor who you think did the best job. Some professors may not be listed
because they are not allowed to receive the award more often than once every
five years. We will close balloting on May 15. To vote, visit http://engr.oregonstate.edu/students/carterballot.php and
complete the short questionnaire. If you have any questions, email Roy.Rathja@OregonState.edu.
ME ADVISING MATTERS. Contrary to information provided in
last week’s e-bulletin, all ME students (pre-engineering and
pro-school) must be advised each and every term (fall,
winter, and spring). Advising for
Fall 2007 is taking place RIGHT NOW
and will continue through May 19th,
so please sign up for your 15-minute appointment today. You can do this in
Dearborn 102.
Check on the ME Bulletin Board outside of Dearborn 102 to see who your advisor is, as assignments may have changed.
ENGINEERS
WITHOUT BORDERS
is seeking applicants for the second site assessment to El Salvador. The travel will be 10 days
during the summer, with exact dates to
be decided based on applicants' schedules. The application form and
instructions are available at http://me.oregonstate.edu/news/bulletins/EWBSiteAssessmentApp2.pdf, and the application deadline
is Monday May 15th. You do not need any specific
technical skills to apply, so please
highlight anything that you think would be valuable in developing a
relationship with this community. This trip will be focused on
continuing to build a relationship with the community,
getting flow data, doing health
presentations, GPS data collection, and technical solutions proposals. FYI - This will be the rainy
season in El Salvador.
Thank you for your enthusiasm! We look forward to receiving many
applications! If you have any questions,
please contact Kelsey Edwardsen, edwardke@onid.orst.edu, (503) 709-9671.
THE ME DEPARTMENT EXTENDS
OUR CONGRATULATIONS to Robert J. Zaworski, ME freshman and one of only four OSU
undergraduates (and only 20 students statewide!) selected to receive a 2006 Oregon NASA Space Grant Consortium
Scholarship. These scholarships are open to new and continuing students in
the disciplines of science,
technology, engineering and
mathematics. Go RJ!
The OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY INDUSTRIAL ASSESSMENT CENTER
(IAC) is currently recruiting student employees. The minimum commitment for
involvement is two summers & one school year,
10-20 hours/week during school, full
time in summer. The IAC offers small and medium-sized manufacturers
comprehensive on-site energy, waste
and productivity assessments. Student teams led by engineering faculty visit
Northwest manufacturers and seek ways to increase profits by increasing
productivity and reducing energy use and waste. To learn more about the Center
and its activities, visit the IAC
web site at http://me.oregonstate.edu/iac/. To apply for IAC
employment, download the application
at http://me.oregonstate.edu/iac/downloads/Job
Application.doc and return your completed form to Joe Junker, 344 Batcheller Hall,
737-5034, JunkerJ@engr.orst.edu.
WANT TO HELP WITH K-12 ENGINEERING OUTREACH ACTIVITIES? The College of Engineering
has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities available for engineering
students interested in working with K12 students and sharing the excitement of
engineering. Twice a month, we will
be sending out a newsletter of upcoming outreach events. If you would like to
receive this outreach newsletter,
please email Ellen Momsen at ellen.momsen@oregonstate.edu and you will be added to
our distribution list. (In your email response,
please include your name, year, and major.) You will then be able to sign up for
events that interest you and fit your schedule. It's a great way to polish
leadership skills, and a lot of fun!
YOUR CHANCE TO IMPACT THE BROADER OSU COMMUNITY. ASOSU invites your
participation in any of its 10 task forces working to benefit all Oregon State
students. For more information,
see http://asosu.oregonstate.edu/taskforces/index.html. If you are interested in
any of these areas,
or if you feel they might be able to address any issues you may have, please contact the task force director listed
below for more information.
·
Graduate Student Affairs: David McCandless, graduate.affairs@oregonstate.edu
·
Multicultural Affairs: Isis Ilias,
multiculture.affairs@oregonstate.edu
·
Community Affairs: Annie McMahon,
community.affairs@oregonstate.edu
·
Accessibility Affairs: Nick Freeburg,
disabled.affairs@oregonstate.edu
·
Environmental Affairs: Anthony Wynne,
enviro.affairs@oregonstate.edu
·
Federal (government) Affairs: Jen Gilbreath, federal.affairs@oregonstate.edu
·
Queer (Gay,
Lesbian, Bisexual, Transsexual,
Intergendered, Questioning)
Affairs: Angi Baxter, queer.affairs@oregonstate.edu
·
Student & Academic Affairs: Dorris Huth, student.affairs@oregonstate.edu
·
Women's Affairs: Krissy Stephen,
womens.affairs@oregonstate.edu
·
State (government) Affairs: Joel Fischer, state.affairs@oregonstate.edu
Grad Students/Faculty/Staff…
ME GRAD STUDENTS: Did
you know that ASOSU has student fee money available to provide up to $150 to
graduate students once per academic year to cover the registration costs
of attending a professional conference?
Applications are available on the ASOSU website at asosu.oregonstate.edu.
For more information, please contact
Stacy Thomsen at 737.8236 or asosu.external@oregonstate.edu. Just think--$150 for filling out a form! Why wouldn’t you do this?
THE OFFICE OF SPONSORED
PROGRAMS AND RESEARCH COMPLIANCE is offering the following workshops during the remainder of
Spring term:
May 11, 3:00-4:00
Grants.gov for NIH
May 23, 2:00-3:30
Conflict of Interest
For workshop descriptions and registration information, visit http://oregonstate.edu/research/osprc. To register, send an e-mail to osprc@oregonstate.edu or call 541-737-9525
(Toshie Gordon) or 541-737-0673 (Stephanie Balagot).
INTEL GRANT FOR SUMMER FUNDING OF UNDERGRADUATE
RESEARCHERS. The COE has received a grant from INTEL to provide up to 5
undergraduate research experiences for women and minority engineering students.
Projects can begin in the spring and continue through the summer, or can be strictly summer projects. Each student
can earn up to $4000 during this project. End date is Sept 2006. Criteria for
projects: Intel has targeted specific areas for this REU. projects may be in
EECS, and specific areas of ChemE, IME, ME, Chemistry,
or Physics. If you would like to participate,
please contact Ellen Momsen (Director of the OSU Women & Minorities in
Engineering Program) as soon as possible at 541-737-9699 or
ellen.momsen@oregonstate.edu. If you already have an undergraduate student
(female or minority) identified,
indicate that; we also have many students who are interested and can select
students for you to interview. There is no cost to the researcher (except your
time!). Goals of this program are to encourage a greater number of women and
minority students to obtain a graduate degree in engineering. Thank you for
assisting COE diversity efforts!
UPCOMING COE FACULTY MEETING WITH OSU PRESIDENT AND PROVOST President Ed Ray and Provost Sabah
Randhawa will meet with the faculty of the College of Engineering on
Wednesday,
May 24, 2:30-4 pm, in Owen 101. Ray and Randhawa will make a few
general introductory comments, then spend the rest of the time listening to CoE faculty
comments, taking questions, etc. You are welcome to submit a question
or suggestion for discussion. Please do so via an
e-mail message to Gigi Bruce in the Provost's Office gigi.bruce@oregonstate.edu, and she will make sure
that President Ray and I are both aware of that input. All CoE faculty,
including professional faculty, are
invited to participate in this discussion.
WORKSHOP OPPORTUNITY FOR
FACULTY AND GRADUATE STUDENTS: How to Engineer Engineering Education. July 17-19, 2006, at Bucknell
University.
For the fifth consecutive year,
faculty from Bucknell University are proud to offer this hands on workshop for
engineering and science faculty and graduate students to enhance their skills
in course design by: Writing clear instructional objectives; Using active, cooperative,
& problem-based learning; Teaching teamwork and problem solving skills;
Assessing learning outcomes; and Sharing experiences about what works and what
doesn't work. Workshop Tuition and Meals: $600 Before May 15th, $650 After May 15th. (Tuition is
non-refundable after May 30.) On-campus room ($120) is available but
optional. Apply for the workshop online @ www.bucknell.edu/Engineering/ProjectCatalyst on or before May 30.
Accepted applicants will be notified on or before June 15. Late
applicants will be considered depending upon availability. QUESTIONS? Contact Professor Michael
Prince, Chemical Engineering
Department, Bucknell
University,
Lewisburg, PA 17837. Telephone:
570.577.1781, email: prince@bucknell.edu
FACULTY RESEARCH GRANT OPPORTUNITY: The Human Frontier Science
Program has issued a Call for Letters of Intent for Research Grants for
Interdisciplinary Research. This program is encouraging collaborative
research across a wide range of disciplines including engineering, life sciences and physical sciences.
Link to program information: http://www.hfsp.org/about/AboutProg.php.
Link to application instructions: http://www.hfsp.org/how/appl_forms_RG.php.
ENGINEERING COMPUTING SERVICES FACT SHEET now available. For the
convenience of engineering faculty who need information on our computing and
networking facilities for proposals,
the College has put together a "fact sheet" that lists all our
capabilities. The information is available at http://engr.oregonstate.edu/it_boilerplate and will be updated as the
CoE CS facilities improve.
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS