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Posted by: jml43 on Aug 21, 2011
Kamrun Kamrunnahar, graduate student in Engineering Science and Mechanics, will present a paper entitled “A square root ensemble Kalman filter application to a moto-imagery brain-computer interface,” at the 33rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC). The conference will be held in Boston, MA from August 30 through September 3. This conference is an annual event that brings together the researchers from all over the world in quantitative fields with a view to medicine and biological applications. To learn more about the conference please visit their web site.
Posted by: jml43 on Aug 15, 2011
Muhammad Faryad, Graduate Student in Engineering Science and Mecahnics, will travel to San Diego, California in August 2011 to present a paper at the SPIE Optics and Photonics 2011 Symposium. Muhammad is advised by Professor Akhlesh Lakhtakia, Charles Godfrey Binder Professor in Engineering Science and Mechanics. To learn more about the meeting, please visit their web site.
Posted by: jml43 on Aug 2, 2011
Adebayo Adejare
While many people can’t think far enough ahead to plan tonight’s dinner, Adebayo Adejare, a sophomore in engineering science and mechanics, is planning a better future for his grandchildren.

The Albrightsville, Pa., native’s efforts in sustainability helped secure him a spot as one of 20 students selected from across the country as one of the nation’s top rising young leaders in the clean energy sector who will participate in Focus the Nation’s Recharge! Retreat August 21-26 on Oregon’s Mt. Hood.

To apply, candidates write an essay explaining their passion, dedication and unique contributions to increasing clean energy in America. Focus the Nation, a national nonprofit that supports rising leaders in launching careers that accelerate the transition to clean energy, then selects and funds the leaders—five each in the categories of Technician, Innovator, Politico, and Storyteller—to attend the retreat. Adejare will join the other four Innovators, represented by students drawn to careers as engineers, scientists, inventors and entrepreneurs who discover and demonstrate the power of clean energy solutions.

He remembers the phone call he received earlier this month, letting him know he would be heading to Oregon. “I was just outside my hometown when I got the call. I applied in May, but I wasn’t really sure I had a chance, since my only credential was being an Eco-Rep on campus last year. I probably didn’t sound too excited, but I was.”
The retreat, designed to encourage today’s young energy leaders to collaborate on clean ideas and meet today's crop of community energy ambassadors, includes activities such as: hiking Elliot Glacier, which has experienced 60 percent snowpack loss since 1982; touring the Boardman Coal Plant, scheduled to close by 2020; and visiting Biglow Canyon Wind Farm, which powers 125,000 homes in Oregon. Adejare says he most looks forward to hiking Elliot Glacier because he’s never seen one before.

As an Eco-Rep in East Halls last year, Adejare promoted sustainable behavior by showing fellow students environmentally friendlier ways of doing everyday things. He explains, “For instance, we ask students to dine in instead of dining out, which reduces packaging.”

Adejare ties his passion for sustainability to his choice of major, “Engineering science and mechanics provides a well-rounded education, since students get a little bit of experience in all the different sciences. This helps a great deal because my focus is unique – I want to work with solar panel technology, increase solar panel efficiency, and make the panels more mainstream with better designs. I’d also like to try to make solar panels out of less conventional materials like plastic.”

He says he hopes to bring back new ideas from his Recharge! Retreat experience and share them with the Eco-Reps, perhaps branching the group out to include community members.

Adejare adds, “Sustainability really is about the future. It’s about making a world we’d love to live in. The actions we do now have a large impact. To have a cleaner tomorrow we have to make the right choices by conserving resources today. It’s not just for you, it’s for your family, your kids, and grandkids.”
**Source: Penn State Live