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RCEAS media exposure on the rise, June 2005 Contribution helps Lehigh keep PACE with cutting edge technology RCEAS researchers maintain strong media presence Prof. Arup SenGupta's work with arsenic-tainted water is detailed in India's Hindustan Times ....(cont.) Ph.D. alum's cutting-edge research is featured in Nature magazine. Nature magazine published an article in December describing research by Animangsu Ghatak.......(cont.) The Morning Call reported that Lehigh held its first wireless technology open house which more than 50 people from industry and the government attended, and Lehigh faculty members from a variety of departments showcased their work. ...(cont.) Researchers in the P.C. Rossin College of Engineering and Applied Science were featured in numerous media articles at the end of 2003. ....(cont.) Microscopic cracks spoil the transparency of glass, researchers find. Jain's group described their findings in an article titled "Inhomogeneous evolution of a glass surface via free, rapid expansion" in the Oct. 6, 2003, issue of Applied Physics Letters....(cont.) Making materials material to younger students. The article was published Sept. 23 in the "A member's voice" section of ASM International's e-newsletter. ASM is the premier society for materials engineers and scientists....(cont.) New York City turns to engineers at ATLSS for help in evaluating suspension bridge cables. An article titled "Studies in Suspense Flourish in New York, published in the Oct. 6 issue of ENR magazine, detailed efforts by the New York State Bridge Authority to "predict if, when, and why cables waken."...(cont.) In The ASMI International Bulletin: The Lehigh University Institute for Metal Forming (IMF) developed a student outreach program that disseminates materials engineering into local middle and high schools through demonstrations, web sites, lesson plans -- and by sending Lehigh students to local schools to teach hands-on "lab" classes. Learn more about the outreach program...(cont.) THE MORNING CALL. Lehigh University has received $1.38 million from the National Science Foundation to help the university's year-old bioengineering program. The Lehigh proposal was one of the four that the NSF funded at a recent meeting in Washington, DC. The success of The work of RCEAS faculty, staff and students has been featured prominently lately in the media. The Engineering Times, a journal, carried an article about the work that scientists at the ATLSS (Advanced Technology for Large Structural Systems) Research Center have done to measure how well the Walt Whitman Bridge is holding up under stress....(cont.) |
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