Jon Hathaway, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering, was selected by the NSF for an Early CAREER Award.
Kelli Grissom, Kristin Miranda, and Katherine Krouse—who are majoring in civil, industrial, and chemical engineering, respectively—received the news at the TSPE’s banquet, which helped raise funds for area educators in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields.
A commitment to the environment led University of Tennessee, Knoxville, engineering graduate Susan E. Stutz-McDonald to a career pursuing ways of making the air, water, and land better for all.
Nancy Love will give her presentation, “At the Confluence: Nutrients, Trace Chemicals, and Sustainability in the Urban Water Sector,” in Room 622 of the Min Kao Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Building.
The perception shift of gravity she felt was very normal to her and natural without having any gravity. “Gravity is not your friend,” when having to adapt to zero G when reentering the atmosphere from space.
Imagine, then, if your trip had lasted a year, and you weren’t just out of town but out of this world. Literally.
Three UT researchers—Maik Lang, assistant professor of nuclear engineering; Haidong Zhou, assistant professor of physics; and Jacob Shamblin, a graduate research assistant in nuclear engineering and physics—studied an important class of complex metal oxides.
A class of UT nuclear engineering students recently got the educational opportunity of a lifetime, thanks to the Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge. Y-12 invited students from one of Howard Hall’s classes to the complex, one of the top nuclear facilities in the world, for what is known as a tabletop simulation.
Mariesa Crow, a leading national expert in renewable energy and energy storage will deliver the second lecture of the spring in the College of Engineering’s Distinguished Lecture Series at 1:45 p.m. on Monday, February 29.
Kai Sun’s research Into power systems nets the electrical engineering and computer science associate professor an NSF CAREER Award.
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Tennessee Engineer is published in the spring and fall by the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tickle College of Engineering for alumni, faculty, staff, and friends of the college.
The college’s annual report is published every year in the fall.