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Category: Student Accomplishments
Posted by: jml43
on Feb 28, 2013
Bingxing Huo, graduate student in Engineering Science and Mechanics under the advising of Professor Patrick Drew, will travel to Salt Lake City, Utah in late February to attend the Computational and System Neuroscience 2013 meeting. While at the conference, Bingxing will present a poster on “Hemodynamic responses in the somatosensory cortex during locomotion.” To learn more about the conference, please visit their web site.
Category: EMch/ESc 514 Seminars
Posted by: sls60
on Feb 25, 2013
Bruce Gluckman
Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics
Wednesday, March 13 2013
3:35pm - 4:25pm
114 EES Building
Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics
Wednesday, March 13 2013
3:35pm - 4:25pm
114 EES Building
Category: Faculty and Staff News
Posted by: jml43
on Feb 22, 2013

Emerald ash borers (EABs), a type of beetle native to Asia, first appeared in the U.S. about 20 years ago. They are now moving east from Michigan, killing ash trees on the Eastern Seaboard as far south as North Carolina.
"Within 25 years, practically no ash trees may remain on either side of the St. Lawrence Seaway," said Akhlesh Lakhtakia, Charles Godfrey Binder Professor of Engineering Science and Mechanics at Penn State.
As their name implies, emerald ash borers are iridescent green. The beetles don't carry disease, but their larvae feed on the ash trees' sap, effectively killing the trees by depriving trees of their nourishment.
Thomas C. Baker, Distinguished Professor of Entomology at Penn State, knew that the male EAB locates a mate by flying over an ash tree, finding a female by identifying her green wings, which are folded over her back, and then dropping straight down onto her.
Baker and a post-doctoral fellow in his lab, Michael J. Domingue, were using dead female EABs for bait to trap the male beetles. Dead EAB decoys are not ideal for trapping, said Baker, because they are fragile and can sometimes disappear from the trap.
Baker then learned that Lakhtakia was able to replicate certain biological materials, such as fly eyes and butterfly wings. Baker posed the question: could Lakhtakia's technique visually replicate the unique female borer to create a better lure?
Category: Faculty and Staff News
Posted by: jml43
on Feb 20, 2013

Category: Faculty and Staff News
Posted by: jml43
on Feb 16, 2013

Category: EMch/ESc 514 Seminars
Posted by: sls60
on Feb 11, 2013
Akhlesh Lakhtakia
Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics, PSU
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
3:35pm - 4:25pm
114 EES Building
Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics, PSU
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
3:35pm - 4:25pm
114 EES Building
Category: Faculty and Staff News
Posted by: jml43
on Feb 8, 2013

Category: Student Accomplishments
Posted by: jml43
on Feb 3, 2013
Justin Kauffman, graduate student in Engineering Science and Mechanics, under the advising of Dr. Corina Drapaca, Assistant Professor, is travelling to Boston in early February to attend the American Society of Mechanical Engineers 2nd Global Congress on Engineering and Biology. While in Boston, Justin will give a poster presentation and getting a 2 page extended abstract published by the conference.


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