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Campus
News: Week of October 29, 2001
Electrifying
Nanotubes
Carbon
nanotubes have the potential to be used for smaller and faster
computer chips, but static electricity poses serious problems
with nanoscale elements in a circuit.
Static
electricity has long been a problem for conventional chips and
electronic devices, but it's especially severe for nanotubes because
of their extreme shape-nanotubes are often micrometers long and
only a few billionths of a meter in diameter. The result of a
small zap destabilizes the nanotubes, making them useless as a
semiconductor.
To
find out how severe the problem is, Pawel Keblinski, assistant
professor of materials science and engineering, and Saroj Nayak,
assistant professor of physics, combined quantum mechanics in
theoretical computer simulations with classical electrostatics
analysis. They found that the electrostatic charge is concentrated
at the tube ends, which eventually destroys the entire nanotube.
The researchers then calculated the maximum charge the tube can
adopt before its ends become unstable. Besides providing a guide
to "safe" operational conditions for nanotubes, this
so-called "tube charging" technique could be used to
open nanotube ends without damaging them, allowing carbon atoms
to react directly with other elements, such as oxygen, boron,
and nitrogen.
Since
carbon nanotubes in their purest form may not be the answer to
building smaller, more efficient computer chips, the addition
of elements such as nitrogen could provide new electrical characteristics
to the tubes or could be used to increase the bonding between
the tubes and other materials.
"It
was exactly the same way with silicon technology. Silicon is not
very useful in pure form. Other elements have to be added to provide
proper electrical characteristics," says Keblinski.
Public
Safety Issues Mail Handling Alert; Campus Community Urged To Use
Caution
In
response to the nationwide anthrax scare, Rensselaer's Department
of Public Safety has issued an alert on the handling of suspicious
mail.
The
alert, defines suspicious mail as letters and packages:
From someone unfamiliar to you.
Have no return address.
Have unusual weight, are lopsided or oddly sealed.
Have strange odors or stains.
May be marked "Rush," "Personal,"
"Confidential," etc.
Show a city or postmark that do not match the return
address.
"If
you think it is suspicious, treat it as suspicious," says
Public Safety.
Do not open
suspicious mail. Call Public Safety immediately at ext. 6611.
Off-campus, dial 911. The Public Safety officer will decide what
further precautionary steps are to be taken, if any.
If you have
opened mail that contains an unknown substance, cover the spilled
contents immediately. Leave the room and wash your hands with
soap and water. Call Public Safety immediately at ext. 6611; off-campus,
dial 911. You will receive immediate directions and help.
The full
directive and other information on Rensselaer's response to the
anthrax scare and the events of Sept. 11 can be found at www.rpi.edu
(click on "Campus Responds").
Forty-Nine
Rensselaer Scholar-Athletes Named to UCAA All-Academic Team
The
2001 Upstate Collegiate Athletic Association (UCAA) Fall All-Academic
Team was announced and a league-high 49 Rensselaer student-athletes
were selected. Honored student-athletes must have at least sophomore
athletic and academic standing, a minimum grade point average
of 3.20, and must be considered a major contributor to their team.
Following
are Rensselaer's UCAA All-Academic student-athletes, by sport.
MEN'S
CROSS COUNTRY
John
Bonnett, Management
Duane Crammond, Chemical Engineering
Ryan Hevner, Mechanical Engineering
Justin Jablonowski, Materials Engineering
Mark Jensenius, Aeronautical Engineering
Matt Stokes, Information Technology
Pete Warrington, Computer Systems Engineering
WOMEN'S
CROSS COUNTRY
Kate Adams, Biomedical Engineering
Jen Barton, Chemical Engineering
Claire Lears, Engineering
Andrea Maggi, Computer Systems Eng. & Electrical Eng.
Jess Orsak, Biomedical Engineering
Cara O'Toole, Information Technology
Katie Roden, Architecture
Rebecca Rosenberg-Beran, Chemical Engineering
Jen Sullivan, Biomedical Engineering & Mechanical Eng.
Edith Werpachowski, Chemical Engineering
FIELD
HOCKEY
Jenn Amyot, Math
Katie Coleman, Mechanical Engineering
Marie Grieco, Electronic Media Arts Communication
FOOTBALL
Marc Blevins, Management
Chris Comisky, Management
Tom Cuomo, Engineering
Mike Defilipi, Information Technology
Joe Gomez, Management
Tom Heusinger, Management
Alex Keel, Information Technology
Joe Prymas, Management
Tony Spackmann, Math
Ken Taylor, Engineering
Matt Verenini, Management
Tom Wallace, Engineering
MEN'S
SOCCER
Scott Bauer, Management
Chris Bohren, Engineering
Brian Clark, Biomedical Engineering
Luke Gentile, Architecture
Nick Ruggio, Information Technology
WOMEN'S
SOCCER
Heather Bauby, Biology
Laura Feeney, Engineering
Kelly Fogarty, Biomedical Engineering
Amy Gontarek, Mechanical Engineering
Susan Gonyea, Civil Engineering
Andrea Hamill, Chemical Engineering
Jill Vanis, Electrical Engineering
TENNIS
Michelle Casey, Management Info. Systems
Jessica DePalma, Electronic Media, Arts, and Communication
Victoria Gardner, Management
Alex Koch, Mechanical Engineering
Thais Triehy, Environmental Science
Lally
School's "Techno-MBA" Ranked Among Top 25 by ComputerWorld
Magazine
In
its fourth annual survey,
Computerworld
has ranked the Lally School of Management and Technology at Rensselaer
among the top 25 schools around the country in techno-MBA programs.
Today's
top techno-MBA programs "focus on providing tools to drive
strategic thoughts to manage business," the weekly print
and online publication for IT professionals states. "The
overriding theme is of shifting the focus away from technology
products and systems and placing the emphasis squarely on the
business's bottom line," the publication adds. "That
ability to distinguish between what's technologically possible
and what's feasible in terms of the marketability, financing,
and profitability of technology-driven business initiatives is
at the heart of all the curriculums in all of Computerworld's
top 25 MBA programs."
In
its fourth annual survey, Computerworld
has ranked the Lally School of Management and Technology at
Rensselaer among the top 25 schools around the country in
techno-MBA programs.
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One
major criterion for the rankings was how well programs relate
to solving real-world technological problems. Many of the top
schools "work with companies to give their students access
to new technologies and new business problems that could be solved
with technology," the publication says.
"I'm
especially pleased that we were ranked so high in a survey that
places a lot of emphasis on solving practical problems. We view
that as one of our real strengths, so it's wonderful that it has
been recognized in this way," says Robert A. Baron, interim
dean of the Lally School.
For
the survey, ComputerWorld reviewed information about various
MBA programs, and campus recruiters nationwide were asked to nominate
their favorite based on their experience in hiring graduates from
those programs. ComputerWorld also asked other universities
to nominate the best techno-MBA programs nationally, other than
their own programs, based on the quality of the curricula in those
programs.
Roysam
New Head of CenSSIS
Badri
Roysam, professor of electrical, computer, and systems engineering,
has been appointed principal investigator of the Center for Subsurface
Sensing and Imaging Systems (CenSSIS), effective Oct. 1.
Roysam
takes over from James Modestino, professor of ECSE, who will leave
Rensselaer at the end of this semester to join the University
of Miami as professor and chair of the Department of Electrical
and Computer Engineering. Modestino has provided the technical
and administrative leadership for the center since its formation
last year as part of an NSF Engineering Research Center led by
Northeastern University in Boston.
Roysam
will be responsible for the technical direction of the research
work, as well as the day-to-day administration of Rensselaer's
portion of the center. He will be the primary technical interface
between Northeastern and the other partner universities, which
include Boston University and the University of Puerto Rico Mayaguez.
Through
subsurface sensing, scientists are able to identify and picture
what is happening under the skin, beneath the crust of the Earth,
below the surface of the ocean, and in other regions that are
not directly and easily accessible. Rensselaer researchers are
already developing applications in subsurface sensing to advance
the detection of breast cancer, land mines, oil deposits, and
pulmonary edema.
Rensselaer
Brings Students Back From Rome; China Programs Not Affected
As U.S. military action began in Afghanistan and in the face
of potential retaliatory acts against groups of American students
in countries that are allied with the United States, Rensselaer
asked all 16 students in its Roman Studies Program to return to
Troy.
The action was prompted by an official U.S.
advisory that said the State Department "has
received information that symbols of American Capitalism in Italy
may be targeted for attack in the next month."
"We knew that we would have little or no ability to protect
our students once some hostile act took place," said Eddie
Ade Knowles, vice president for student life. "The time to
act was before anything happened. We could not downplay or ignore
the potential for retaliatory acts against American students living
and studying together in countries that have supported America
in the battle against terrorism."
Housing, meal plans, and admission to classes were immediately
provided to the returning students who had planned to spend the
entire fall semester in Rome as part of the School of Architecture's
study abroad program.
Rensselaer's spring 2002 educational programs in China, sponsored
by the School of Architecture and by the Lally School of Management
and Technology, will continue as planned. The State Department,
the Institute, and other universities see little danger of retaliatory
acts against American students in China as the result of current
hostilities in Afghanistan.
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