cal poly engineering advantage - spring 2015

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ENGINEERING Features College News Student News Faculty News Alumni News Department News Haas grant funds scholarships in advanced manufacturing Kimloan Hill establishes scholarship in son’s name Parsons gifts to boost Innovation Quest competition SWE announces Outstanding Women in Engineering Civil engineering students cast a new concrete canoe QL+ team develops prosthetic hand for U.S. Navy SEAL College announces 2014 faculty and staff awards Computer science professors receive Google grants Vigil recognized for efforts in waste management Computer engineering students display capstone projects Cal Poly CubeSat launched New courses, new professor for transportation program Parsons’ Bill Britton named Visiting Cybersecurity Director Cal Poly engineers contributes to Solar Decathlon team Cal Poly again ranked high in return on investment FIELD WORK: Aerospace engineering students Brandon Berry and Max Heald prepare the RMAX helicopter for an early-morning sound test at Cal Poly’s Walters Ranch. At right, Eric Belfield and Berry take ambient noise levels before firing up the RMAX. At left, Heald takes a wind speed reading. Ted and Dick Melsheimer take different roads to success Aerospace alums build models of Webb Space Telescope Class of 1964 gathers at Cal Poly for 50th reunion College of Engineering Cal Poly San Luis Obispo Spring 2015 Advantage I t was not yet dawn when Aaron Drake and student researchers met on campus in March to review safety procedures and the detailed plan to ground test Cal Poly’s RMAX helicopter, a remote-piloted, fully-autonomous flight vehicle. Drake, a professor in the Aerospace Engineer- ing Department, is director of the Applications in Autonomous Flight (AAF) program overseeing the student-staffed, professional flight test operation that provides research and data collection services for various applications of unmanned aerial systems (UAS). AAF team members include aerospace engi- neering seniors Max Heald, Eric Belfield, Brandon Barry and Nia Asmady , and mechanical engineering freshman Matthew Payne. Cal Poly AAF got off the ground in 2013 with a $100,000 grant from the Raintree Foundation, which provided funding to hire Drake, purchase a flight test support van, and support the Earn by Doing student researchers. The strategic goal of Cal Poly’s AAF initiative is to participate in the rapid advancement in the UAS industry which is largely driven by new, small companies that may lack the expertise to examine the full system. “Cal Poly can step into the vacuum and provide valuable services to UAS companies, while prepar- Prepared for Take-off Please see AUTONOMOUS FLIGHT, Page 5 Applications in Autonomous Flight program allows engineering students to explore growing field of UAVs

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Page 1: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

ENGINEERING

Features College News Student News Faculty News Alumni NewsDepartment News

• Haas grant funds scholarships in advanced manufacturing• Kimloan Hill establishes scholarship in son’s name• Parsons gifts to boost Innovation Quest competition

• SWE announces Outstanding Women in Engineering• Civil engineering students cast a new concrete canoe• QL+ team develops prosthetic hand for U.S. Navy SEAL

• College announces 2014 faculty and staff awards • Computer science professors receive Google grants • Vigil recognized for efforts in waste management

• Computer engineering students display capstone projects • Cal Poly CubeSat launched• New courses, new professor for transportation program

• Parsons’ Bill Britton named Visiting Cybersecurity Director • Cal Poly engineers contributes to Solar Decathlon team• Cal Poly again ranked high in return on investment

FIELD WORK: Aerospace engineeringstudents Brandon Berry and Max Heald prepare the RMAX helicopter for an early-morning sound test at Cal Poly’s Walters Ranch. At right, Eric Belfield and Berry take ambient noise levels before firing up the RMAX. At left, Heald takes a wind speed reading.

• Ted and Dick Melsheimer take different roads to success • Aerospace alums build models of Webb Space Telescope• Class of 1964 gathers at Cal Poly for 50th reunion

C o l l e g e o f E n g i n e e r i n g • C a l P o l y S a n L u i s O b i s p o • S p r i n g 2 0 1 5Advantage

It was not yet dawn when Aaron Drake and student researchers met on campus in March to review

safety procedures and the detailed plan to ground test Cal Poly’s RMAX helicopter, a remote-piloted, fully-autonomous flight vehicle.

Drake, a professor in the Aerospace Engineer-ing Department, is director of the Applications in Autonomous Flight (AAF) program overseeing the student-staffed, professional flight test operation that provides research and data collection services for various applications of unmanned aerial systems (UAS). AAF team members include aerospace engi-neering seniors Max Heald, Eric Belfield, Brandon Barry and Nia Asmady, and mechanical engineering freshman Matthew Payne.

Cal Poly AAF got off the ground in 2013 with a $100,000 grant from the Raintree Foundation, which provided funding to hire Drake, purchase a flight test support van, and support the Earn by Doing student researchers. The strategic goal of Cal Poly’s AAF initiative is to participate in the rapid advancement in the UAS industry which is largely driven by new, small companies that may lack the expertise to examine the full system.

“Cal Poly can step into the vacuum and provide valuable services to UAS companies, while prepar-

Prepared forTake-off

Please see AUTONOMOUS FLIGHT, Page 5

Applications in Autonomous Flight program allows engineering students to explore growing field of UAVs

Page 2: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Last fall, the College of Engineering piloted participation in #GivingTuesday, the nationwide giving campaign. The 24-hour effort falls in early December

following Black Friday. “Our goals were not just about dollars raised,” noted Dean Debra Larson.

“We hoped to increase philanthropic participation, especially from those who had never given before.”

Working directly with students, the College of Engineering advancement team with support from University Advancement produced videos, social media

messages and email content that high-lighted the impor-tance of student clubs to Cal Poly’s Learn by Doing environment. At the end of the day, the effort paid off with a response that included alumni, parents, faculty, staff and students. Of the 193 gifts, 45 were from first-time donors. The original

dollar goal of $25,000 was almost doubled with gifts totaling close to $49,000. “We are encouraged by the results and expect to make #GivingTuesday an

annual event,” said Larson. “#GivingTuesday helps make everyone more aware of the importance of philanthropy — it can open the door to the special satisfaction that comes from giving back.”n

ENGINEERINGAdvantage

PEDAL POWER Mechanical engineering students Austin Frederickson and Anthony Jacques pedal their electric-assist tricycle, “Electric Tandemonium,” around the Engineering Plaza. For more on the Tandemonium, see P. 10.

Industrial engineering

students Nieko Decker, Jack

Walsh, Daniel Kwan, Keoni Sanchez and Alek Squires

work in a database

class.

Invest in the Best

#GivingTuesday Effort Surpasses Expectations

A new computer lab configured to op-timize multidisciplinary thinking and

multifaceted collaboration speaks largely to the power of small gifts.

Alumni donations helped produce a new home for collaboration among indus-trial and manufacturing students and their multidisplinary counterparts. Half of the $105,000 workspace was paid with state lottery funds and half was paid by alumni donations.

“It’s a modern, highly flexible space that can accommodate a variety of col-laboration activities,” said Jose Macedo, chair of the Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering Department.

Each collaboration table in the room allows up to six students to plug in their laptops, tablets or smartphones and proj-ect their screens on one of two monitors. Industrial engineering junior Jack Walsh said that he’s part of a four-member team that meets regularly in the workspace to collaborate on database management projects.

“This collaboration space has already become an intrinsic part of the depart-ment’s learning environment,” said Macedo. “And the fact that it was made possible by support from our alumni shows the impact that gifts from individu-als can make on student learning.” n

n TITLE — Engineering Advantagen ISSUE — Spring 2015 • Vol. 12, Issue 2 n FREQUENCY — Published biannuallyn PUBLISHER — Cal Poly College of Engineeringn ADDRESS — 1 Grand Avenue, San Luis Obispo, CA 93407

n TELEPHONE — 805-756-2131 n WEB — ceng.calpoly.edun ALUMNI IN THE NEWS — ceng.calpoly.edu/alumni/alumni-in-the-newsn CALENDAR OF EVENTS — ceng.calpoly.edu/event-calendarn GIVING TO THE COLLEGE — ceng.calpoly.edu/giving

n FACEBOOK — facebook.com/CalPolySLOEngineering n TWITTER — twitter.com/PolyEngineeringn INSTAGRAM — @polyengineering n FLICKR — flickr.com/photos/125133101@N06/sets n YOUTUBE — youtube.com/user/polyengineering

2

Alumni Giving Adds Up to Collaborative Lab

Page 3: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

3

Invest in the Best

Parsons Gifts to Boost Cal Poly’s Innovation Quest CompetitionTwo recent gifts from Parsons will

enhance Cal Poly’s Innovation Quest (iQ) competition, a key component of Cal Poly’s efforts to promote student entrepreneurship.

Parsons sponsored a $10,000 award in the 2015 iQ competition to recognize innovative concepts that are likely to lead to an entrepreneurial venture in the architectural, engineering and construc-tion (AEC) arena. In addition, Parsons is providing $10,000 to aid continued presentation of the iQ program.

Now in its 12th year, the campuswide iQ competition is designed to help Cal

Poly students take their Learn by Doing orientation right into the marketplace. In partnership with the Cal Poly Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship, iQ

offers no-strings-attached funding and assistance for the best ideas presented by students.

“This competition offers university students an opportunity to get their ideas, projects and programming no-ticed, rewarded, and potentially intro-duced to the venture capital industry,” said Chuck Harrington, Parsons’ chair-man and CEO.

Tom Katona, iQ faculty director, notes that the support from Parsons will have a huge impact on the program. “Historically, student participation in the AEC area has been underrepresented.

The Parsons award will incentivize stu-dents to not only generate innovations in architecture, engineering and con-struction but to also consider the market value of those ideas,” he said.

In addition to supporting Cal Poly’s iQ competition, Parsons is involved in Cal Poly’s initiative to become the lead-ing supplier of cybersecurity profes-sionals and has committed $100,000 to this effort over a two-year period, which began in 2014.

For more information on iQ, visit innovationquest.org.n

Engineering gain hands-on exposure to CNC systems and CAD/CAM software through the IME department’s manufac-turing courses taught at the freshman level each year.”

Manufacturing, mechanical or in-dustrial engineering students who have

completed their freshman year are eli-gible to apply for the Haas scholarship. Several scholarships will be awarded each spring or summer for the following academic year, based on demonstrated interest and experience working with CNC machines and CAD/CAM software.

“This scholarship grant is another great example of the support that the Gene Haas Foundation has provided Cal Poly Engineering in expanding oppor-tunities for our students and preparing them for today’s advanced manufactur-ing careers,” said Georgeou.n

Haas Scholarships Fund New DirectionsA $50,000 grant from the Gene Haas

Foundation will support scholarships for students interested in advanced manufacturing that includes hands-on computer numerical control (CNC) and computer-aided design and manufactur-ing (CAD/CAM) studies.

The scholarships will provide support for students focusing on manufacturing in the Mechanical Engineering (ME) and Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering (IME) Departments.

“Students enrolled in IME’s upper-division manufacturing curriculum will be heavily exposed to CNC programming and sophisticated CAD/CAM software,” said Trian Georgeou, who recently joined IME as a manufacturing engineer-ing instructor.

CNC machining is an advanced manu-facturing process that uses computers to automate and control machine tools such as lathes, mills, routers and grinders.

“In the IME Department, we have more than 80 students who are engaged in CAD/CAM programming in all its aspects,” said Georgeou. “Meanwhile, the new manufacturing concentration in the Mechanical Engineering Department brings a vast number of ME students into upper-division manufacturing courses that cover CAD, CNC machin-ing, fixture design, automation and inspection techniques.”

“Furthermore,” he said, “more than 500 students from the College of

Fourth-year manufacturing engineering student Ryan Blodgett (right) and instructor Trian Georgeou work at the Haas CAD/CAM machine.

Cal Poly iQ startups cover a wide spectrum of business.

Alumni Giving Adds Up to Collaborative Lab

Page 4: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Kimloan Hill has reclaimed her life many times. She was a street vendor in Vietnam before immigrat-

ing to the U.S. In this country, she became a wife and had three sons, but domestic violence forced her to become a single mother. Realizing she wanted an edu-cation, she staged a one-person sit-in at the University of Missouri Registrar’s Office until they allowed her to enroll in the History Department on a trial basis.

“I was 41 when I received my undergraduate de-gree and decided to go on for a master’s degree at the University of Oregon,” said Hill. “Then I was diag-nosed with cancer. My professors and fellow students were there for me, and I finally earned a Ph.D. at the age of 51.”

Despite financial hardship, all three of Hill’s sons went to college. The engineer, Jeremiah, came to Cal Poly.

“It took Jeremiah six years to complete his de-gree in mechanical engineering because he worked 30 hours per week or more as a mechanic all the way through,” explained Hill. “Sometimes, he just needed $50 to buy groceries.”

After graduating, Jeremiah pursued a career as an engineer in the oil industry. He was engaged to be married. But a tragic accident at home in 2011 took his life just four months after Jeremiah’s father, Benhard,

died of cancer. Several years after her son’s death, Hill attended

a dean’s reception. “In being there and meeting the leadership team of the College of Engineering, I felt that I was touching my son in spirit,” said Hill. She es-tablished a lasting bond with Cal Poly and a tribute to Jeremiah by establishing the Benhard A. and Jeremiah C. Hill Scholarship Endowment with a little inheritance from Jeremiah’s life insurance policy and the money she had saved for his wedding. Doing so, she found, enabled her to return to life.

“I was finally able to get involved in a part of Jeremiah’s life,” Hill said. “The scholarship is the little bit I can do to help students in need. I know other students, like Jeremiah, might not have $50 to buy groceries at the end of the month.”

Joining Hill in contributing to the scholarship is Jeremiah’s high school friend and college roommate, Eric Gollmyer (B.S., Mechanical Engineering, 2008), who now works in the drilling industry. “I give now because I can,” said Gollmyer, simply. “I remember Jeremiah had to ask for $10 once — I hope this schol-arship means that another student doesn’t have to ask for that little bit of help they need.”n

Kimloan Hill with son Jeremiah after his graduation from Cal Poly in 2009. Jeremiah earned his B.S. in mechanical engineering.

Invest in the Best

SUPPORT CAL POLY ENGINEERING NOW — AND AGAIN — WITH A RECURRING GIFT

Make your giving simple and painless. Instead of making a one-time donation, become a recur-ring gift partner, and your predetermined gift amount will be automatically charged to your credit or debit card.

Your recurring gift provides a steady flow of funds that Cal Poly Engineering will use to pro-vide timeless opportunities for students today — and tomorrow.

To set up your recurring gift, go to giving.cal-poly.edu and click “Give Online.” Designate the the College of Engineering or a program of your choice. Choose the Recurring Gift option listed under Giving Preference. Recurring gifts can only be set up with an initial gift charged immediately.

If you have questions or would like to modify or stop your recurring gift at any time, send an email to [email protected] or call 805-756-1558.

4

Returning to Life Kimloan Hill establishes scholarship in son’s memory

Page 5: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

ing students to be leaders in the industry,” explained Drake. “I would envision expand-ing the AAF team to as many as 20 students serving clients by planning research missions, designing and integrating payloads, writing test plans, obtaining regulatory approval, performing risk assessments and more.”

The purpose of the March ground test was to gather RMAX noise level data for Vandenberg Air Force Base, one of numer-ous requirements to allow the RMAX to fly in Vanden-berg’s restricted airspace, thereby enabling some stu-dent research and master’s thesis projects. Drake hopes to have Federal Aviation Administration approval to fly in unrestricted airspace by the end of the year, which will broaden project opportunities.

The first order of business for the ground test in March was to identify possible risk factors in the test, ranging from an engine fire to rotor damage and personnel injury, reviewing corrective action, and going over the 29-step test plan. The team then loaded the RMAX for transport to the test site along with the weight device they designed and built to ensure that ve-

hicle would not leave the ground, even when the throttle was revved to 75 percent maximum.

As the sun came up, the AAF research caravan made its way over hillocks and past cows and meadow larks to the Walters Ranch test site west of campus. There, they first checked the wind speed.

“Any time we operate the vehicle, we make sure that the wind speed is under five knots,” explained the data recorder, Eric Belfield. “Anything stronger could desta-bilize the helicopter.”

With the wind recorded at two knots, the well-rehearsed team proceeded to place and weight the RMAX, mark measurement and personnel monitor

locations, and form a phalanx to sweep the area for foreign object debris. The ground operator, Max Heald, was responsible for the vehicle pre-start.

“I was a helicopter mechanic in the U.S. Marine Corps before coming to Cal Poly,” Heald said. “I hope to become a flight test engineer for the Navy or Air Force, so this is great experience.”

The other team members were likewise enthusiastic about their AAF work.

“There are not many schools where you can get experience with helicopters,” said Payne, the freshman who wants to become a research and develop-ment engineer.

Belfield plans to focus his master’s degree project on the integration of solar cells into small unmanned aerial vehicles. “I’ve really benefited from leaning how pro-fessionals do things,” he said. His career goal? “I’d be happy working on anything that flies.”

Although the RMAX did not — emphasize, did not — fly that early spring morning, the ground test brought it one step closer to doing so. In the eyes of the student participants and their advisor, the sky is indeed the limit for Cal Poly’s growing AAF program.n

Autonomous Flight From Page 1

College News

5

Engineering students join Solar Cal Poly for the 2015 Solar Decathlon

Standing before the 2005 Cal Poly Solar Decathlon House at left, the 2015 Solar Cal Poly team is excited to produce a new solar- powered house like the artist’s rendering above.

It’s been 10 years since Cal Poly’s last solar home was displayed on the Capitol Mall in Washington, D.C. as

part of the 2005 Solar Decathlon’s solar village.Once again, Cal Poly has been selected to par-

ticipate in the Solar Decathlon, a U.S. Department of Energy-sponsored competition. Seventeen teams of faculty and students from across the nation have been challenged to design, build and operate solar-powered houses that are cost-effective, energy-efficient and attractive. The contest culminates at the Great Park in Irvine, Calif., in October 2015.

“Cal Poly is uniquely qualified to participate in this project because of its strengths in engineering and architecture and its strong focus on project-based learn-

ing,” said College of Engineering Dean Debra Larson. “The College of Engineering is contributing a multidis-ciplinary team of students and four faculty advisors to work with colleagues from the Architecture Department.

Team advisors include Kim Shollenberger (Mechani-cal Engineering), Dale Dolan (Electrical Engineering), John Clements (Computer Science) and Art MacCarley (Electrical Engineering and Bioresources and Agricultural Engineering). Sandy Stannard (Architecture) serves as the principal investigator on the project. The 100-person team includes students majoring in architectural, electrical and mechanical engineering; architecture; landscape architec-ture; graphic communication; marketing; and business.

At the center of Cal Poly’s Solar House is a core that

contains the active intelligence of the structure — me-chanical, electrical, plumbing and monitoring systems that allow inhabitants to interact with the house. The adaptable outer shell of the structure integrates sun shading, thermal mass and natural ventilation.

Solar Cal Poly hopes to raise $650,000 for all aspects of the competition, from construction materials and heavy equipment for transportation, to contractual ser-vices and published documents. The solar house will be built on campus, disassembled, trailered to Irvine, and then reassembled and lived in by students as part of the competition.

For more details on how you can help, please visit calpolysolardecathlon.org or call 805-756-7108.n

Creating Sun-Powered Housing

Joining Aerospace Engineering Professor Aaron Drake, left, for the sound test for the RMAX helicopter were mechanical engineering stu-dents Eric Belfield, Nia Asmady, Brandon Barry, Max Heald and Matthew Payne.

Page 6: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

In January, a top cybersecurity expert at Parsons assumed a new role. Vice Presi-

dent for Cyber Strategy William J. “Bill” Britton now serves as the inaugural visiting director of Cal Poly’s Cybersecurity Center, responsible for leading the university’s cyber initiative into a nationally prominent center that includes educational, research, outreach and partnering activities.

The goals of Cal Poly’s cyber initiative — which include hardware and software, facilities, and curriculum development — are to produce qualified graduates in computer science with a cybersecurity specialization and educate them in the advanced engineering, science and busi-ness applications of cyber technologies and systems. The initiative is also aimed at preparing students for service in support

of the national defense industry and intel-ligence community, advanced study and applied research.

Dean Debra Larson stressed the timeliness of Britton’s appointment, “Both private and public sectors in the world today conduct business via the electronic highway, but we are daily confronted by news of cyberattacks that are disruptive to our economic health and security.”

She added, “With Bill’s help as the Par-sons Visiting Director of the Cybersecurity Center, we will foster the talent and create the workforce to help ensure the safety of cyberspace. In fact, the active cooperation between Cal Poly and Parsons signifies a new model for university/industry relations in which we work shoulder-to-shoulder to advance educational opportunities.”n

Cal Poly Appoints Parsons Vice President as Visiting Cybersecurity Center Director

The 2015 Digital Democracy platform launch will convert video files of legisla-

tive hearings into searchable transcripts, providing unparalleled public access to state government — a project initiated by Cal Poly’s Institute for Advanced Technology & Public Policy (IATPP), and aided and abet-ted by Computer Science Professors Foaad Khosmood, Alex Dekhtyar and Franz Kurfess.

The groundbreaking open government platform received a $1.2 million boost from the Laura and John Arnold Foundation. The funding will allow the institute to convert video files of California legislative hearings into accurate and searchable transcripts that are freely available to the public.

“This project showcases what we do best here at Cal Poly,” said Khosmood, a comput-er science professor who serves as an IATPP senior research fellow. “It’s an exciting Learn by Doing opportunity for students to build something special from the ground up and for a great cause. This project will provide our students with valuable experience in data science, artificial intelligence, natural language processing and machine learning,

all within a multidisciplinary context.”Digital Democracy unlocks an entirely

new data source: the full text of negotia-tions, debates and exchanges occurring within California’s capitol. Until now, this information has not been available to the public, despite the fact that California’s 120 full-time lawmakers introduce an average of 5,000 bills each legislative session. IATPP has already beta tested a proof-of-concept version of the platform with the media and members of the the public.

The Digital Democracy platform includes transcripts of legislative hearings, a search-able video database, profile pages that track campaign donations and other politi-cal information, and social media sharing functionality.

To learn more about Digital Democracy, visit bit.ly/1DQ5AuT. n

Digital Democracy

College News

6

Cal Poly Computer Science professors contribute to new open government platform

Parsons Vice President for Cyber Strategy William J. Britton will serve as the inaugural visiting director of the Cal Poly Cybersecurity Center.

Built by Cal Poly students

in San Luis Obispo and

Pomona, “Soaring Stories”

travels down Colorado

Boulevard in Pasadena dur-

ing the 2015 Rose Parade.

Cal Poly’s “Soaring Stories” won the Lathrop K. Leishman Trophy

for the most beautiful non-commer-cial float at the 2015 Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, Calif.

The float was constructed by students from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and their counterparts at California State Polytechnic Univer-sity in Pomona. “Soaring Stories” depicted a fairytale castle and mythological griffin springing to life from the pages of storybooks.

On the San Luis Obispo cam-pus, Cal Poly Engineering team members were at the fore, includ-ing program leader Delaney Bales, a mechanical engineering senior;

design chair Jessica Brough, an aerospace engineering senior; con-struction chair Loren MacDonald, a mechanical engineering senior; and assistant construction chair Kendall Searing, an electrical engineer-ing senior. The construction team included mechanical engineering students Will Dundon, Sam Fleet, Rachel Kangas, Emily Woods and Irene Yee; bioresource and agricul-tural engineering major Philippe Napaa; and aerospace engineer-ing senior Morgan Montalvo. The design team included mechanical engineering senior Celine Allor and biomedical engineering senior Helena Yanez.n

Cal Poly Rose Float Wins Leishman Trophy

Page 7: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

A Cal Poly education continues to be one of the best values among

the nation’s top schools. A new survey from Payscale.com, the online salary, benefits and compensation informa-tion company, ranks Cal Poly ninth among the nation’s public universities for return on in-state tuition invest-ment and No. 29 among all institu-tions, both public and private.

Cal Poly Engineering was rated 12th best value for computer sci-ence majors who can expect to earn nearly $1 million ($989,800) over 20 years — highest among all Cal Poly degree holders — on an investment of $93,200. For non-California residents, that figure is $574,600 (No. 36) at a cost of $138,400.

For other engineering majors, the 20-year return on investment is $809,800 (No. 40) and $764,600 (No. 60) for out-of-state residents.

For Cal Poly at large, graduates can expect $669,800 (up from $611,700 re-ported in 2014) over 20 years. The list includes the weighted total cost for a graduate based on in-state tuition rates along with the 20-year net return on investment.

The 2015 PayScale study included 1,223 public, private, religious and secular universities around the nation.

“Cal Poly consistently provides a

top-flight education at an affordable price — a degree that continues to pay dividends throughout our stu-dents’ careers,” said Cal Poly Presi-dent Jeffrey D. Armstrong. “This latest PayScale listing is just further proof that we are fulfilling our mis-sion to provide industry with highly sought-after, work-ready graduates.”

For more information, visit: payscale.com/college-roi.n

College News

7

Intuitive Surgical wowed Cal Poly engineering students when the Sunnyvale, Calif., company dis-played and allowed test drives of its da Vinci Xi Surgical System in the Advanced Technology Laboratory in Febru-ary. At left, Amy Kerdok, Intuitive’s clinical development engineer, explains the workings of the four-armed robot. The da Vinci is designed to allow doctors to perform “minimally invasive surgery” with laser-guided precision.

Cal Poly Again Ranked High on Return on Investment

Cal Poly Rose Float Wins Leishman Trophy

The 4-Armed Doctor Will See You Now

The Mustang Wayis Highly Efficient

Cal Poly is rated the most efficient school among regional western

universities in a U.S. News & World Report analysis that compared spend-ing and educational quality.

U.S. News looked at the public and private colleges that scored the highest on overall undergraduate academic educational quality — as measured by their position in the magazine’s 2015 Best Colleges rank-ings — but that spent relatively less on their educational programs to achieve that quality.

According to the magazine, schools such as Cal Poly are doing a good job managing their financial resources relative to institutions that may have far greater resources be-cause of more state funding, higher tuition or a larger endowment.

“This is yet another indicator of the quality and value of a Cal Poly education,” said Cal Poly President Jeffrey D. Armstrong. “This rank-ing shows parents, current and future students, alumni and taxpayers that we are being judicious stewards in our mission to deliver a high-quality, cost-effective education.”

The U.S. News efficiency rankings are available at bit.ly/1HupMDY. n

Cal Poly rated the most efficient university in the West by U.S. News

Average 20-year ROI of nearly $670,000 is ranked ninth among the nation’s public universities

Page 8: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Student News

8

Twenty Cal Poly students, including eight from the College of Engineer-

ing, who have received state and national awards were recognized on March 9 by state lawmakers at the Capitol in Sacramento.

The group was introduced on the floors of the Senate and Assembly by local representatives Assemblyman Katcho Achadjian and Senate Majority Leader Bill Monning. In addition, the students will met with Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom.

State lawmakers also honored Philip Bailey, dean of the College of Science and Mathematics since 1983. Bailey joined Cal Poly’s faculty in 1969. He campaigned for the Warren J. Baker Center for Science and Mathematics for 17 years before construction began in 2010.

Participating Cal Poly Engineering students included:

n Delaney Bales (Mechanical En-gineering) who contributed to the Cal Poly universities’ Tournament of Roses Parade Float team, which won the Lath-rop K. Leishman Trophy for the most beautiful non-commercial float at the 126th annual parade.

n Gordon Belyea (Mechanical Engineering), the team leader for Cal Poly’s unmanned aerial vehicle, “Sky-Barge,” that earned honors at the 22nd

annual American Society of Mechanical Engineers Student Design Competition in Montreal.

n Michelle Lam (Computer Science) received the 2014 CSU Trustees’ Award for Outstanding Achievement.

n Matthew Philley (Mechanical Engineering) and teammates Luis Cuellar and Keith Yu won the Academic Olym-piad at the Society of Hispanic Engi-neers Conference. The trio defeated 60 other collegiate teams.

n Samantha Rawlins (Aerospace Engineering) is the first Cal Poly stu-

dent inducted into NASA’s Student Ambassadors Virtual Community, an online network designed to elevate the contributions of NASA interns. She joins 104 other top-performing interns across the nation.

n Kaylinn Roseman (Civil & Envi-ronmental Engineering) was president of Cal Poly’s student chapter of the Institute of Transportation Engineers, named as the institute’s international chapter of the year.

n Yakov Suvorov (Civil & Envi-ronmental Engineering) was part of a

student team that placed second at the International Environmental De-sign Contest held at New Mexico State University.

n Courtney Thomas (Environmental Engineering) is president of the Cal Poly Society of Women Engineers, which re-ceived the Outstanding Collegiate Sec-tion Gold Award — the national Society of Women Engineers’ highest award.

For a complete list of the Cal Poly students recognized, see http://www.calpolynews.calpoly.edu/news_releas-es/2015/March/state_capitol.html.n

When Engineering Education is ElementaryAs part of National Engineers Week in February, members of Cal Poly’s Soci-ety of Women Engineers (SWE) visited local fourth grade classrooms to teach students about the field of engineering and conduct hands-on science dem-onstrations. At right, Berkeley Davis (Mechanical Engineering) and Melanie Thatcher (Materials Engineering) see how much weight a paper pillar con-structed by a group of fourth-graders at Sinsheimer Elementary in San Luis Obispo can handle. At left, aerospace engineering student Kyle Libby shares a laugh with Davis and the young engi-neers. By reaching out, SWE members hope to get students interested in math, science and all things related to engineering. n

Twenty Cal Poly students and College of Science and Mathematics Dean Philip Bailey, pictured at center, were honored by lawmakers in Sacramento.

Cal Poly Engineering Students Honored at State Capitol

Page 9: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

The Cal Poly Society of Women Engineers (SWE) announced five recipients of the 2014 Outstanding

Women in Engineering (OWE) award at its Evening with Industry banquet in January.

Attended by almost 300 students, faculty, staff and representatives from 27 companies, the banquet honored student accomplishments. In addition to the OWE honorees, 29 students were recognized with more than $32,000 in scholarship awards from Boeing, Cal Poly SWE, Chevron, Eaton, Fluor, Lam Research, Mazzetti, NetAPP, Orbital Sciences, Parker Aerospace, Phillips 66, Raytheon, Skyworks, Solar Turbines and Trane.

The OWE awardees were chosen based on four criteria: faculty recommendations, demonstrated leadership, related work experience and grade point average. The recipients are:

n Kristina BishardA biomedical engineering senior from Arvada,

Colo., Bishard is immersed in the world of academic research. A member of the department’s skin research lab since her freshman year, she developed stand-out research and leadership skills that have made her, in the words of faculty advisor Lily Laiho, the de facto lab manager. Bishard was recently awarded a grant from the Hannah-Forbes Fund to continue her research as a senior project. In another senior design project for Edwards Lifesciences, she is helping optimize manufacturing of one of the com-pany’s heart valves.

When not in the lab, Bishard is active in student philan-thropy. As someone who lives with diabetes, she has been an especially passionate member and fundraiser for the Cal Poly Diabetes Club.

n Allie DavisA civil engineering senior from Boulder, Colo.,

Davis has a bent for international work and study. As a member of Engineers Without Borders-Cal Poly, she has been project manager for the chapter’s Thailand program since her freshman year, overseeing water sanitation, agricultural and hydroelectric projects. An-other significant component of Davis’ education has included her living experiences in East Asia, Santiago, Chile and, most recently, Spain, where she is took courses at the Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya in Barcelona, a renowned engineering school. An intern-ship in Sacramento last summer with MWH Global Inc., an international consulting firm in water infra-structure, deepened and broadened her future plans to work as a consultant for agencies, government and communities pursuing development.

n Cristina FormainiA computer science senior from Stevenson Ranch,

Calif., Formaini credits being one of the first women to graduate from Cal Poly’s new cybersecurity pro-gram with immediately landing her a job with Apple’s product security team. Similar trailblazing traits were reflected in her role as president of the computer sci-ence department’s two largest clubs – WISH (Women Involved in Software and Hardware) and White Hat, an organization for students interested in making the Internet a safer place – where she used her leadership positions to open doors and create new learning environments for women in computing and those inter-

ested in pursuing the emerging field of cybersecurity.

n Nicole O’HearneFrom San Francisco, Calif., O’Hearne is an architec-

tural engineering senior with a distinguished record of academics and student leadership. She has facilitated student leadership training for Cal Poly’s nationally ranked orientation program, Week of Welcome, and is president of the Structural Engineers Association of California, where she built a range of programs to sustain, enhance and expand student connection and involvement. Following her graduation in June, she will begin a summer internship at Degenkolb, a structural engineering firm in San Francisco. The job will build on her internship experience at Holmes Culley, an inter-national practice specializing in earthquake-resistant engineering.

n Jessica PeaseAs a woman in the world of computer science,

Pease is often an anomaly, but the computer science senior from Elk Horn, Calif., aims to change that. As president of the Computer Science Department’s White Hat and WISH clubs, simultaneously, Pease organized one of the largest student groups to attend one of the world’s largest gatherings of women tech-nologists — the Grace Hopper Conference for Women in Computing. As a club officer, Pease also started and ran a Lean-In circle to help students explore some of the issues facing women in computing. Pease’s leader-ship bridging the gender gap in the cybersecurity field has also been acknowledged by industry leaders. n

Cal Poly Society of Women Engineers honors five Outstanding Women in Engineering recipients for 2014

Student News

9

SWE Honors Top Engineering Students

The Cal Poly Society of Women Engineers Outstand-ing Women in Engineering recipients for 2014 included, left to right, Allie Davis (Civil Engineering), Nichole O’Hearne (Architectural Engineering), Jessie Pease (Computer Science), Cristina Formaini (Computer Science) and Kristina Bishard (Biomedi-cal Engineering).

Page 10: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Student News

Software Engineering Professor David Janzen is known for his year-long senior capstone

class that provides students with valuable experi-ence working with real clients on real-world proj-ects. One of the clients this year is Scientific Drill-ing International (SDI), which has a research office located in Cal Poly’s Tech Park on campus.

SDI makes down-hole tools used in direction-al drilling for oil and other types of wells. Janzen has two student teams develop-ing software applications that take real-time data from SDI’s tools and make it accessible on or off the rig site through mobile devices.

“Some of the significant chal-lenges in the applications include creating real-time graphs on the mobile devices and interfac-ing with SDI systems,” said Janzen.

“This project involves integrating differ-

ent technologies and touching every level of the software development process,” explained senior Daniel Nishi. “It’s great experience — I’ve been asked about it in every job interview.”

Indeed, the capstone class seems to provide

an effective career launching pad — in March, the project team members had already secured jobs with companies like Workday, Intuit, Google and FabTime. n

Built for Two: The“Electric Tandemonium”

Mechanical engineering students Austin Frederickson, Kris Lawrence, Anthony Jacques and Preston McElroy are working on the Electric Tandemonium, an electric-assist tricycle designed for two people. The Tandemonium team aims to create a system that results in a “bionic feeling” for the riders in which a “lower than normal input force to the pedals would result in a greater output torque than normal.” Among the listed goals for this project are to create a final product that is safe to use and fun to ride. (Judging from the photo on Page 2, mission accomplished). n

Project mentors from Scientific Drilling include (standing left to right) Erik Schumm, Jonathan Little and Jesse Englert. Not pictured is Nathaniel Burger. The student team includes computer science seniors (bottom left to right) Jean Paul Tu, Daniel Nishi, Kevin Feutz, Olin Olmstead and Allen Wong.

Nine mechanical engineering seniors hope to see their electric commuter multicopter take flight,

even though they’re still working on preliminary com-ponent testing and evaluation.

The project was proposed by alumnus Bob Addis (B.S., Mechanical Engineering, 1985) and Bill Bruner from Vertical Enterprise, in coordination with Law-rence Livermore National Laboratory and NASA. The ultimate goal is to create a small, single-seat aircraft that complies with Federal Aviation Administration regulations.

Reaching for New Heights

“Our main goal is to provide stakeholders with a design and the accompanying engineering analysis for a full-scale aerial vehicle capable of sustained flight,” said team member Alex O’Hearn. “We believe future design iterations and improvements should continue

and pave a path for the commercialization of easily accessible commuter aircraft.”

If additional funds become available, the team plans to extend its goals to include the building and testing of a full-scale prototype.n

The team designing the Electric Commuter Multicopter, shown at left, includes mechanical engineering students Alex O’Hearn, Arthur Norwood, Blake Sperry, Ike Sheppard, Jerrell Washington, Kyle Kruse, Marley Miller, Ollie Kunz and Sam Juday.

Electric commuter multicopter project aims to make quick flights a breeze

Capstone Class Offers Solutions to Local Company

10

Page 11: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Cal Poly Engineers on Track to Compete

CAL POLY BAJA SAE CAR: Cal Poly’s Society of Automo-tive Engineers teams design, build, assemble and test race cars to compete in the SAE Collegiate Design Series against other universities from around the world. The Cal Poly Baja SAE team, which will compete in mid-April in Au-burn, Ala., includes, clockwise from left: Tony Purcaro, Kevin Jantz, Paul Schwartz, Gordan Bradaric, Michael Schier, Alex Miller, Thomas Woodward and Nick Bonafede. The collegiate Baja teams compete in four categories: Acceleration, Hill Climb, Maneuverability and Suspension Design.

Student News

CAL POLY SUPERMILEAGE VEHICLE: Mechanical engineering students Eli Rogers and Sean Michel work on Cal Poly’s Supermileage vehicle in preparation for the Shell Eco-Marathon in mid-April in Detroit. The Shell Eco-Marathon challenges student teams from around the world to design, build and test ultra energy-efficient vehicles. In the past, Cal Poly teams have built vehicles that have traveled more than 1,200 miles on a gallon of gas.

CAL POLY HUMAN POWERED VEHICLE: A team of mechanical engineering students including, from left, Peter Aumann, Rama Adajian, Judy Lantaca, Loren MacDonald and Matt Allen are working on the “Sweet Phoenix” for entry in the American Society of Mechanical Engineers Human Powered Vehicle Challenge in San Jose, Calif., in late April. Designed for cornering stability rather than straight-line speed, the Sweet Phoenix is a rear-wheel drive tricycle with a light-weight carbon shell. n

CAL POLY FORMULA SAE CAR: Mechanical engineering student Aaron Feinstein, above, works on the brake assembly amid a large team preparing for the SAE Formula SAE Series races in Lincoln, Neb., June 17-20.

Capstone Class Offers Solutions to Local Company

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Page 12: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Teamwork was on full display at the Concrete Canoe Casting Day in Janu-

ary as dozens of engineering students poured and hand-applied a carefully crafted mix of wet concrete into a foam mold. The result would shape their future at the Pacific Southwest Conference (PSWC) Concrete Canoe Competition.

The regional student competition of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) was held April 8-11 in Tucson, Ariz. (Results were not available as of the printing of this newsletter. See pswc2015.weebly.com for information.)

“One of our goals this year was to cre-ate a lighter and more workable mix that would be easier for the construction cap-tains and volunteers to work with,” said Jessica Leyva, project manager. “Based on Casting Day, I’d say it was a success.”

After allowing the final canoe to cure, the team had eight weeks to sand it, smooth it, apply the graphics and seal it.

The 2015 team is made up of mix captains Joshua Core, Julie Hendrick, and Brandon McCormick; construction captains Brett Diener, Tim Forrest and Dayna Scott; and paddlers Hendrick, Diener and Forrest, with Kayla Smith.12

Creating a concrete canoe requires hours of hands-on effort from a large team. In January, dozens of Engineering students hand-rubbed a special mix of concrete into the canoe mold.

Weeks after Casting Day, the now-cured concrete is sanded for hours with increasingly fine sandpa-per before sealing and painting. Here, mix captain Julie Hendrick (Civil Engineering) grinds away on the new canoe named “Jumanji.”

Student News

Dozens of engineering students lend a hand

at Concrete Canoe Casting Day

Sanding a Canoe

“Each captain has already contrib-uted considerable time to the proj-ect — adding up to more than 1,000 person-hours so far,” said Leyva. “We’re all passionate about the project and working hard to live up to the success of past years.”

Last year, Cal Poly’s concrete canoe took first place in oral presentation and second overall at the National Con-crete Canoe Competition. It was the ninth consecutive year that Cal Poly has placed in the top five at the “America’s Cup of Civil Engineering.”n

Page 13: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

13

Student News

A team of six Cal Poly students, including three engineering majors, received $2,500 and

four iPad tablets for their mobile mental health application as top prize winner at Cal Poly Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship’s 2nd annual Design and Dev Hackathon. More than $7,500 in prizes were awarded at the event in January.

The winning software application, called Optimist, started with a simple idea, said Alyssa Wigan, a graphic communication major who came up with the concept.

“I wanted to create an app that would not only make stressed students feel better but to also make mental health a more common topic of con-versation,” she said. “Optimist accomplishes this by making the process of finding optimism fun, using virtual geocaching to search for and unlock messages around you on a map.”

Wigant teamed up with two other graphic communication students, Hannah Giorgi and Miranda Pickett, as well as computer engineer-ing majors Cory Mayer and Johnson Zhou, and computer science junior Jacob Johannesen.

“Hackathon is for any Cal Poly student but specifically designers and developers to spend 12 hours hacking away at any sort of idea that they have,” said Chelsea Brown, manager of Student Innovation Programs at the university’s Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, which co-sponsored the event with the Creative Media Development student club.

“That could be building a mobile application, it could be building a website. Essentially it’s just a fun way for students to engage in entrepreneur-ship for 12 hours on a Saturday.”

Hackathon attracted about 130 participants, from all of the university’s six colleges, who formed 18 teams that worked against the clock to design and develop ideas. Concepts included an app offering dating ideas and locations, a money transfer application, and a social media app to share rental housing ratings.

Optimist won the $2,000 grand prize from TransUnion, an international credit information and information management services company.n

The senior project challenge for mechanical engineering students

Heather Martin, Jose Lemus, Ryan Burke and Michael Friedman is to design, build and test a mechani-cally actuated prosthetic hand for an active-duty U.S. Navy SEAL.

The project is sponsored by the Quality of Life Plus (QL+) Founda-tion, which partners with the College of Engineering’s QL+ Lab to develop innovative adaptive technologies on behalf of veterans with service-related injuries.

The Cal Poly seniors are seeking to design and develop a rugged and more versatile version of one of the several open-source prosthetic hands currently available. Their Navy SEAL client will operate the prosthe-sis by flexing his or her wrist, which creates tension in the cables routed from the forearm to the fingers, closing them into a grip. A locking mechanism will enable the user to lock the fingers in a desired grip po-sition so that heavy objects can be carried for long periods of time.

Team member Lemus is himself a combat veteran, having served tours

in Iraq and Afghanistan. “It has been an honor working on this amazing project,” he said. “As a military veteran, I appreciate what the College of Engineering and the QL+ laboratory are doing to help our wounded warriors, and I hope to see more similar senior projects in the near future.”n

Cal Poly Engineering Students on Winning Hackathon Team

QL+ Team Designs Prosthetic Hand for U.S. Navy SEAL

STEM in the Fast Lane at Cal Poly

Hackathon winners Team Optimist includes, from left, Hannah Giorgi, Alyssa Wigant, Miranda Pickett, Jacob Johannesen, Cory Mayer and Johnson Zhou.

Mechanical engineering students Heather Martin, Jose Lemus, Ryan Burke and Michael Friedman designed a built a prosthetic hand for a U.S. Navy SEAL.

On campus in January to speak about the impor-tance of STEM (science, technol-ogy, engineering and math), NASCAR driver Danica Patrick visited with mem-bers of the Cal Poly Racing Team, who displayed their Formula race car in Mustang Plaza.Patrick, who ap-peared with GoDaddy CEO Blake Irving, discussed STEM as well as her experience defying odds in a male-dominated sport. Patrick is an inspi-rational role model whose sport relies heavily on science and technology. This past season, she had hashtag #STEM prominently displayed on her No. 10 GoDaddy Chevy.

Page 14: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Global Game Jam is a game creation event on an epic

scale. In January, the annual event engaged almost 30,000 game enthusiasts at hundreds of jam sites around the world. No wonder it is recognized as the largest game jam in the world by the Guinness Book of World Records.

The 48-hour mental mara-thon involves fevered activity, “but it’s not a competition, it’s a collaboration,” said Foaad Khosmood, Cal Poly computer science professor and president of the international non-profit organization, Global Game Jam Inc., based in San Luis Obispo, Calif.

“The Global Game Jam brings together skill levels and talents from every field — programming, music, psychology, you name it — and creates a concentrated arena to test new ideas and learn new skills,” said Khosmood. “It’s an incubator that can inspire the kind of creative interaction that produc-es new products and startups.”

A case in point is MonsterCreate, a series of educational apps that promote creativity in children while teaching them to use technology tools.

The concept came to Jacob Johan-nesen in a computer science class, then gathered steam and a team at last year’s Global Game Jam. The group developed the game further, and it was recently released as a free app for iOS devices. In addition to Johannesen, a computer science junior, the team includes computer science senior Elliot Fiske, software engineering junior Francis Yuen, software engineer-

ing senior Kyle Piddington, computer science junior Andrew Adriance and agribusiness major Luke Bayard.

Technology companies are closely watching the growing “indie game” movement (independent game devel-opment by individuals or small teams), noted Khosmood. Intel even sponsored its own game jam at Cal Poly, taking 10 of the games to its booth at the Game Developer Conference, which is an Oscar-style cross-section of game de-signers, interactive developers, writers and academics.

“Game jams are a great way to gain Learn by Doing experience by going from idea to operational product in a very compressed amount of time,” explained Khosmood. “It’s where students get comfortable enough with their skills and knowledge to actually use technology to create.”

View Cal Poly’s 2015 game apps at globalgamejam.org/2015/games. n

Related link:MonsterCreate on.fb.me/1HTaZ5L

14

Student News

First a poet, then an engineer, Kory Barri hopes to combine his

skills to innovate. The manufacturing engineering major won Cal Poly’s Al Landwehr Creative Writing Contest with his poem “Sand Castles,” which will appear in the Cal Poly literary magazine Byzantium.

“I’d say I was a poet before I was an engineer,” said Barri. He later discov-ered math and science: “The two studies, however, appeared to be completely isolated from each other — math and science being deeply rooted in the binaries of right and wrong answers, and English being open to creative response.”

In envisioning a career path, Barri re-alized that both his passions were key to innovation. “I always dreamed of being an inventor,” he explained. “Through in-novation, I can incorporate the problem-solving techniques of math and science

along with the creativity of English. “I chose manufacturing engineer-

ing at Cal Poly because the major gives students both the business and scien-tific sides of engineering, which with my English minor to stimulate creativity, can hopefully pave a smooth road to becoming an innovator.”

Barri says that he often discovers an abstract metaphor hidden between

engineering and language arts, as in “Sand Castles,” which uses the structure of a sand castle as a metaphor for hu-man consciousness.

“Writing and engineering are two distinct, yet equally important pieces of what makes me who I am,” he said. “It’s quite a humbling thing when the two collide into a single idea.”n

The Poet-Engineer Kory Barri wins Cal Poly’s Al Landwehr Creative Writing Contest

Game Changer 2015 Global Game Jam allows designers to test concepts and skills

Manufacturing engineering student Kory Barri combines innovation in the workshop and in verse.

MonsterCreate, an educational app that promotes creativity in children by allowing them to design their own monsters, was a new product produced at the 2015 Global Game Jam.

YOUR PROJECT COULD BE SHOWCASED ON THE COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING’S FACEBOOK PAGE

GET FEATURED!!FOR INFORMATION GetFeaturedceng.calpoly.edu/get-featured

Working on a cool senior project? Do you want your work to be seen by prospective employers, friends, family, and other students?

HOW IT WORKS• Every Thursday the College of Engineering Facebook page will feature a student project.• All current Cal Poly College of Engineering students are invited to apply.

As man wages war against waves on the shoreWith a pretense to win, he within prepares forThat swift, shameless fall; what else could be planned?A structure of sand is not structured to stand.

From “Sand Castles”

Page 15: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

15

Department News

In Anaheim, 10,000 passengers can board up to 10 different transporta-

tion modes daily. Los Angeles’ Union Station now accommodates foot, bi-cycle and bus traffic, while California just broke ground on a bullet train.

That’s a glimpse of the changing transportation landscape that awaits a new generation of transportation engineers — and Cal Poly’s transpor-tation program is reflecting this future with new faculty, curriculum and ap-plied research opportunities.

Leading many of these changes are Anurag Pande and Robert Bertini in the Civil & Environmental Engineering Department. New to

Cal Poly, Bertini brings experience as current chair of the operations sec-tion and traffic flow committee of the Transportation Research Board. He also served as deputy administrator of research and innovative technology for the U.S. Department of Transpor-tation.

“When I talk about transportation, I talk about challenges that inspire us to get involved in solving problems — safety, mobility, sustainability,” said Bertini. “I try to connect students with the profession through commu-nity-based projects using real data, interactions with professionals, and by pursuing scholarships, internship

and other opportunities.”The hub of these goals is a new

transportation engineering student workspace that will be administered by the student chapter of the Institute of Transportation Engineers. Using a data-driven approach, students will help industry and government agen-cies find answers and explore op-portunities in the areas of sustainable transportation, intelligent systems and safety.

Another program goal, said Ber-tini, “is to prepare our students to get out in the world and get involved in modernizing the way we solve trans-portation problems.” n

CubeSats, which have shown how lots of little satellites can do a lot of

space science, are about to be further enabled by a similar approach — a little closer to Earth.

The goal of the SatNet program is to harness the collective power of individual ground stations to receive CubeSat data. One of SatNet’s devel-opers, Ricardo Tubio, arrived at Cal Poly last fall as a visiting post-doctoral researcher from the University of Vigo in Spain.

During his year at Cal Poly, funded by the European Barrie Foundation to promote international technology development, he is coordinating an

international SatNet team, including two Brazilian students who will join him at Cal Poly this summer.

“Currently, no operational network exists for CubeSats,” said Tubio. “Our project, which is expected to be ready by September, will

connect many different ground sta-tions together by Internet. Someone in Europe, for example, will be able to use a ground station in North America to communicate with a satellite.”

The international, open-source proj-ect is largely funded by the European Space Agency.

“I had heard about Cal Poly because of its role in developing the CubeSat design standards,” said Tubio. “I met Jordi Puig-Suari (founder of the Cal Poly CubeSat Program) in Spain when we were both working on projects for the European Space Agency, and through our shared work and interests, we established solid bonds.”

“One of the goals of SatNet is to establish multi-national collaborations that broaden the small satellite de-veloper community and enhance the sharing of knowledge,” he said. “I think we’ll see how diversity can bring excit-ing new ideas and opportunities to the space industry.”n

Visiting Researcher Brings International Focus to Cal Poly CubeSat Program

Transportation is Going Places at Cal Poly

Transportation systems planning students accompany Rob Bertini, associate professor, for a spin around Engineering Plaza. From left to right: Brian Rodriguez (City & Regional Planning), Nora Chin (Transportation Engineering) Alex Chambers (Civil Engineering), Professor Robert Bertini, Sam Gross (Transportation Engineering), Lance Knox (Transportation Engineering) and Johanna Caspersson, exchange student from Sweden.

Ricardo TubioAerospace

Engineering

“I try to connect students with the profession through community-based projects using real data, interactions with professionals, and by pursuing

scholarships, internships and other opportunities.”Robert Bertini | Civil & Environmental Engineering

FOR INFORMATION GetFeaturedceng.calpoly.edu/get-featured

Working on a cool senior project? Do you want your work to be seen by prospective employers, friends, family, and other students?

Page 16: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

ProjectShowcase

Department News

Cal Poly CubeSat team members Justin Foley and Alicia Johnstone check out a Delta II rocket at Vandenberg Air Force Base with Professor John Bellardo.

Fun with science: Requiring both hardware and software expertise, the PORUS ASTRO SUPERCOMPUTER team worked with Sandia National Labs to build a “Jetson-based” low-cost, high-performance supercomputer. At right, computer engineering student Nate Wrye demonstrated the features of the computer that included a Jello mold of a human brain on top, along with the requisite number of wires. Along with Wrye, the Porus Comput-ing team included Will Blumhardt, Cary Dobeck, Zach Reardon, Sean Sheen and Eric Sobel.

Above: Establishing a RADIO FREQUENCY IDENTIFICATION LIBRARY for use with mobile devices is the subject of a team working with Professor Tali Freed, left, that in-cludes Vincent Chan, Darren Mistica, Katrina Cruz, Jeslin James and Daniel Shu. Right: The RADIO FREQUENCY PHOTOGRAPHY project aims to “tag” a person into a photo by using RFID scans. Team members included Anthony Fata, Anibal Hernandez and Robert Prosser.

Below: BICYCLE ENERGY HARVESTING using two sources of power — solar cells and electric sensors mounted near the spokes — was the subject of a project by Jackie Fong, Anna Velasquez, Aaron Gragg and Steven Jack.

The NO ARMS LASER TAG team is designing laser tag hardware that can be mounted on a person’s chest or wheelchair so that they can play laser tag. The team includes Paul Fallon, James Johnston, Zach Mintzer and Michael Norris.

16

A United Launch Alliance Delta II rocket carrying the Soil Moisture Active Passive

(SMAP) payload for NASA and a CubeSat for Cal Poly lifted off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in late January.

SMAP’s purpose is to map the moisture levels in topsoil around the world to help scientists better predict droughts, floods and other weather factors. The spacecraft ascended into space and deployed its solar arrays after a flawless launch, stated NASA officials. The three-year, $916-million mis-sion is managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).

SMAP has a giant antenna that will help create a global map of topsoil moisture levels every three days. The antenna, which is close to 20 feet in diameter, is the largest of its kind ever flown in space, according to NASA, and is unbelievably accurate.

In addition to the SMAP, the rocket also carried three nanosatellites, also known as CubeSats, for Cal Poy, JPL and Montana State University. n

Cal Poly CubeSat Rides on Vandenberg Launch that Carries Climate Satellite

Computer Engineeringstudents display a wide spectrum of capstone senior projects

Page 17: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Faculty News

n Multidisciplinary

Pat Howe (Journalism) and Foaad Khosmood (Computer Science) received a grant from CPConnect to launch an online video game review and analysis magazine, Poly Game Review. Students in majors from across campus will produce the publication.

n Biomedical Engineering

Kristen Cardinal and biomedical engineering students Scott Herting and Alex DiBartolomeo attended the annual conference of the Surfaces in Biomaterials Foundation, Biointerface, held in Redwood City, Calif., where they presented their work on “Human Umbilical versus Coronary Cell Sources for Tissue Engineered Blood Vessel Mimics.”

n Civil & Environmental Engineering

Robert Bertini participated in a panel discussion on “Redefining Mobility: Connected and Automated Vehicles” at the San Diego Association of Govern-ments Board of Directors retreat in San Diego. The session was chaired by alumnus Randy Iwasaki (B.S., Civil Engineering, 1982), executive direc-tor of the Contra Costa Transportation Authority.

n n n

Yarrow Nelson received a $46,000 grant from BiOwiSH Technologies Inc. to investigate methods to remedi-ate petroleum-contaminated soil in Kuwait. The company develops and manufactures environmental products for consumer, wastewater treatment, agriculture, aquaculture, and agronomy industries. Graduate student Brad Kohlrus and undergraduates Sam Cronnin and Dominic D’Orazio have contributed to the on-campus re-search that involves simulating soils and petroleum contamination, measuring

FacultyNotes

Cal Poly’s College of Engineer-ing announced recipients of

industry and donor-sponsored fac-ulty awards, an endowed profes-sorship and the 2014 Outstanding Staff Awards at the college’s winter meeting in December.

Electrical Engineering Associ-ate Professor Dale Dolan received the two-year, $20,000 Lockheed Martin Endowed Professorship. Dolan works in the area of power and energy, focusing on energy efficiency, sustainable energy and power electronics, all of which directly serve the aerospace indus-try. His partnerships with industry included work with Airbus Defense and Space, Inc. on the “MEA (More Electric Aircraft) Failure Simula-tion” project. He also received support from Lockheed Martin for his work with the Cal Poly Sustainable Power for Electrical Resources project and from Northrop Grumman for work on cold capable electronics.

Mechanical Engineering Profes-sor Russ Westphal was awarded the $1,000 Raytheon Excellence in Teach-ing and Applied Research Award. Westphal received grants from the

U.S. Air Force, Northrop Grumman and NASA for a wing boundary layer data measurement system.

The Don & Paula Heye Award for Outstanding Club Advisor was present-ed to John Fabijanic, lecturer in the Mechanical Engineering Department. Fabijananic serves as mentor to three Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) student design competition teams, in-cluding Formula SAE, Formula Electric and SAE Mini Baja.

The Don & Paula Heye Award for

Outstanding Teaching was pre-sented to Vladimir Prodanov, assistant professor in the Electrical Engineering Department. Pro-danov’s recognition is tied to his classroom teaching initiatives, such as video recordings, redesign of connected lab experiences and the senior project lab.

Donna Aiken, administrative support coordinator in Computer Engineering, and Cody Thomp-son, technical support staff in Aerospace Engineering, received this year’s Outstanding Staff Awards.

As the sole support staff for the Computer Engineering program, Aiken has a wide range of respon-

sibilities, such as developing logistics for the CPE mentor program, editing the CPE alumni newsletters, tracking the program budget, supervising stu-dent assistants, overseeing makeover of the program website and handling all other office management tasks.

Thompson, the only technician for Aerospace Engineering Department, is recognized as a multi-tasking problem solver with infinite patience for last-minute requests.n

College of Engineering Announces 2014 Faculty and Staff Awards

Donna Aiken (Computer Engineering) and Cody Thompson (Aerospace Engineering) received Outstanding Staff Awards.

The College of Engineering’s 2014 Outstanding Faculty Award winners were, left to right, Dale Dolan, Vladimir Prodanov, Russ Westphal and John Fabijanic.

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Page 18: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Mechanical Engineering Professor Saeed Niku was awarded a Ful-

bright Specialist Scholarship to travel to India to teach, present workshops and collaborate with the faculty of Apeejay Stya University near New Delhi. Niku presented concepts on quality design, entrepreneurship and robotics to their faculty and students. In par-

ticular, the university selected Niku for the Fulbright position because of his expertise in design methods, design creativity and innovation. A member of Cal Poly since 1983, Niku earned a master’s degree at Stanford and doctorate at UC Davis. He is a registered professional engineer.n

Cal Poly Mechanical Engineering Professor Saeed Niku, left, tours the Taj Mahal in Agra, India, with Professor RaviKumar of Apeejay Stya University.

Saeed Niku Awarded Fulbright Scholarship

biodegradation rates, and testing the effects of additives such as bacteria, fertilizers and surfactants on biodegra-dation rates.

n n n

Robb Moss was invited to give a presentation to the Earthquake Engi-neering Research Institute chapter at University of Nevada Reno on “Reverse Faulting and Probabilistic Surface Dis-placement Estimates for Engineering Applications.” He also co-authored “Liquefaction Potential of Recent Fills versus Natu-ral Sands Location in High Seismicity Regions Using Shear Wave Velocity” published in the Journal of Geotechni-cal and Geoenvironmental Engineering

(No. 04014112, e-published Nov. 2014).n n n

Jim Hanson co-authored “Bentonite Extrusion from GCLs as a Function of Moisture Content, Stress Application and Temperature” with Nazli Yesiller, director of Cal Poly Global Waste Research Institute, Christopher Ethier (B.S., Civil Engineering, 2014) and Taki Chrysovergis (B.S./M.S., Civil Engineering, 2012). Hanson presented and published the paper at the 7th International Conference on Environ-mental Geotechnics held in Melbourne, Australia (2014 Proceedings, pp. 512-519), where it was awarded best theme for development in geosynthetics. Hanson and Yesiller co-hosted the

18

Faculty News

Sam Vigil, a member of Cal Poly’s Civil & Environmental Engineering

Department since 1982, was awarded the Richard I. Stessel Waste Manage-ment Award by the Air and Waste Management Association. The award recognizes individuals or agencies for outstanding achievements in waste management science and technol-ogy, management and regulation, or education.

Vigil shares this year’s award with Ryan Dupont of Utah State University. The presentation ceremony will take place June 24 at the Association’s 108th Annual Conference & Exhibition in Raleigh, N.C.

Vigil’s career includes 29 years of active and reserve military service, dur-ing which he improved the U.S. Navy’s waste management and environmental stewardship practices. One of his key professional accomplishments was de-velopment of an early computer model for solid waste management, which was

first used by the California Integrat-ed Waste Manage-ment Board.

Vigil is also known as a leader in the application of waste manage-ment techniques to the emerging field of sustainability engineering. At Cal Poly, he developed a unique graduate

course in sustainable engineering and served as a member of two interdis-ciplinary teams working to develop sustainable buildings and facilities on campus.

Vigil also published “Integrated Solid Waste Management: Engineering Principles and Management Issues” with co-authors George Tchobano-glous and Hilary Theisen (McGraw Hill, 1993).n

Sam Vigil Recognized for Lifetime Achievements in Waste Management

Sam VigilCivil & Environmental

Engineering

first Global Waste Research Institute Geoenvironmental Engineering Sympo-sium on campus in February. With more than 60 attendees, the conference featured recognized national and inter-national experts in the field, including academics and practitioners.

n Computer Engineering & Computer Science

Foaad Khosmood, Phil Nico and com-puter scienc graduate student Jon Woolery co-authored “User Iden-tification Through Command History Analysis,” which Woolery presented at the 2014 IEEE Symposium Series on Computational Intelligence in Orlando, Fla. Khosmood also helped produce another record-breaking Global Game Jam. In January, the annual 48-hour game creation activity attracted almost 30,000 participants from 78 countries. Khosmood serves as the president of the San Luis Obispo-based non-profit corporation. The Cal Poly local jam site was organized by the Cal Poly Game Development club and sponsored by

iFixit corporation. For information see globalgamejam.org/2015/jam-sites/cal-poly-ifixit.

n n n

Chris Lupo facilitated an equipment award of 15 high-performance worksta-tions with Xeon Phi coprocessors from Intel Corporation to promote teaching and research in massively parallel accelerated computing.

n Computer Science & Software Engineering

John Clements gave an invited talk at RacketCon, a workshop focused on the Racket programming language, held this year in St. Louis. Clements also served as program chair of the Scheme and Functional Programming Workshop in Washington D.C.

n n n

Aaron Keen and Kurt Mammen pub-lished “Program Decomposition and Complexity in CS1,” at the ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE) 2015 conference in Kansas City, Mo. Keen and Zoë Wood also published

Page 19: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Touring the General Motors plant in China with Cal Poly Industrial Engineering’s Karen Bangs, right, were Nick Kelly, Cal Poly industrial engineering senior; Patty Guerrero from the University of Nevada, Reno; Justin Geyer (back), from CSU Chico; Chris Renwick from Deakin University; Jeff DeBord (back), University of Cincinnati; Sean Macwilliams, Cal Poly industrial engineering junior; Carl Thompson (back), CSU Chico; Connor Owen, Cal Poly business senior; and Jessica Wang, resident director assistant for the University Study Abroad Consortium.

Cal Poly Computer Science Professors Zachary Peterson, Michael Haungs, John Clements and Zoë Wood received Computer Science Engagement Awards from Google.

When Karen Bangs, an industrial engineering instructor, took a

sabbatical in China last fall, her supply chain management and management leadership courses drew students from Cal Poly; Chico State; University of Cincinnati; University of Nevada, Reno;

and Deakin University in Australia. Among the highlights were plant tours of General Motors and Atlas Copco, “which was a great opportunity to compare two very different supply chains and get a glimpse into manufac-turing in China,” said Bangs.n

Sabbatical in China Promotes Teaching, Studying Abroad for Cal Poly’s Karen Bangs

19

Faculty News

Four Computer Science Professors Receive Google CS Engagement Grants

Google and Cal Poly have a com-mon concern: how do we retain

students in the field of computer science once they’ve had their first exposure to the discipline?

The goal of Google’s Computer Science (CS) Engagement Awards Pro-gram is to help faculty and instructors identify engaging and relevant educa-tional resources for their introductory undergraduate CS courses, thereby setting the stage for early student suc-cess and retention in the field.

This year, Google provided grants to 53 computer science faculty and instructors from colleges and univer-sities in 24 U.S. states. Cal Poly was singled out to receive four awards to computer science professors John Clements, Michael Haungs, Zachary Peterson and Zoë Wood.

The unrestricted gifts of $5,000 will be used to identify and imple-ment solutions for increasing student engagement and retention, including development of activities, projects and labs.

These high-quality instructional materials will be added to the open source EngageCSEdu database cre-ated by Google in partnership with the National Center for Women in Information Technology. n

Dan Jansen, chair of the Civil & Environmental Engineering Depart-

ment, has been elected a Fellow of the American Concrete Institute (ACI). As an ACI Fellow, Jansen repre-sents “outstanding contributions to the production or use of concrete materi-als, products and structures in the areas of education, research, develop-ment, design, construction or manage-ment.” Jansen was recognized for his re-search in areas that advance the knowl-edge base of the concrete structures industry. His work with compacted earth was also cited for contributing to the construction of safe concrete struc-tures in seismically active developing

countries. An ac-tive proponent of student research and industry engagement, he has encouraged student study of recycled materi-als in concrete and the use of concrete as a low-impact build-ing materials. Jansen earned a bachelor’s degree in structur-al engineering from UC San Diego and a doctorate in civil engineering from Northwestern University. n

Jansen Elected Fellow of American Concrete Institute

Dan JansenCivil & Environmental

Engineering

“Building Worlds: Bridging Impera-tive-First and Object-Oriented Pro-gramming in CS1-CS2” at the SIGCSE conference.

n n n

Zachary Peterson presented “DEFY: A Deniable, Encrypted File System for Log-Structured Storage” at the 2015 Network and Distributed System Security Symposium in San Diego, a highly selective publication venue for computer security. Computer science graduate stu-dent Tim Peters and Mark Gondree from the Naval Postgraduate School

provided the research assistance for the study. Peterson also received a grant from a medical-imaging device manufactur-er for helping develop a cryptographic library to help protect sensitive patient information.

n Electrical Engineering

Dennis Derickson, chair, and electri-cal engineering graduate student Bassem Tossoun presented “Hybrid Silicon Mode-Locked Laser with Improved RF Power by Impedance

Page 20: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

20

Faculty News

Fundamental Mechanics Relationships Using Inquiry Based Learning Activi-ties” at the Frontiers in Education Conference in Madrid. At the same conference, Self, Widmann and Michael Prince from Bucknell University led a mini-workshop on “Inquiry-Based Learning Activities: Hands-on Activities to Improve Conceptual Under- standing.” Self and Widmann also presented a workshop on “Active Learning and Inquiry Based Learning Activities in Dynamics” at the University of Navarra – Tecnun in San Sebastian, Spain.

n n n

Russ Westphal co-authored “Measure-ments of the Skin Friction and Heat Transfer Beneath an Impinging Slot Jet” published in Experimental Ther-mal and Fluid Science (Vol. 60, January 2015, pages 213–222). He received a $121,300 grant from the U.S. Air Force

Research Laboratory via Northrop Grumman for a two-year project to develop laminar flow technology for low-drag aircraft. Westphal served as faculty advisor to the SkyBarge student team. The unmanned aerial vehicle placed second in American Society of Mechan-ical Engineers Student Design Compe-tition on Nov. 17 in Montreal. Press on the SkyBarge team in-cluded the following: • Cal Poly News — calpolynews.calpoly.edu/news_releases/2014/No-vember/second_drone.html • The Tribune News — calpolynews.calpoly.edu/news_releases/2014/No-vember/second_drone.html • ASME News — asme.org/about-asme/news/asme-news/north-dakota-states-uav-prototype-soars-first. n

CENG Welcomes New FacultyGraham DoigAssociate Professor, Aerospace Engineering

Ph.D. University of New South Wales, Sydney, AustraliaResearch & Expertise: Experimental and numerical aerodynamics, prototype vehicle design and development and interdisciplinary research in fluid dynamics.

Since arriving on campus, Doig has overseen a major overhaul of the wind tunnel laboratory and founded the Fluids Laboratory for Interdisciplinary Projects (FLIP), a non-traditional research group that focuses on cutting-edge projects, such as mimicking nature’s most capable long-range travelers to create more efficient air, road and marine vehicles; using explosive blast waves to extinguish large-scale fires; and designing a UAV that can collect

fresh volcanic lava samples to better predict eruptions. “There are no dull days at FLIP,” he noted. “In fact, I want to better showcase the unique nature of engineering education at Cal Poly.”

Davide FalessiAssociate Professor, Computer Science/Software Engineering

Ph.D., University of Rome Tor VergataResearch & Expertise: Software engineering, empirical software engineering, requirements engineering, software architecture and technical debt.

Currently the multimedia editor of IEEE Software, Falessi is conducting research on technical debt, which refers to the eventual consequences of poor system design. He is also developing the software infrastructure for the Digital Democracy project. “I’m really excited to teach software engineering principles and its practical aspects in a Learn by Doing way,” he said. “In my experience, this is the only way students can effectively learn the discipline.”

Graham DoigAerospace Engineering

Davide FalessiComputer Science

& Software Engineering

Matching” with UC Santa Barbara co-authors at the Photonics West Confer-ence San Francisco. The research is on combining photonics functionality and electronics functionality on a single silicon chip.

n Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering

Tali Freed chaired a session on “Community Service Operations Research: Learn by Doing” at the INFORMS Conference in San Francisco. Papers presented in the session were authored by alumnus Jesse Buke-nberger (B.S./M.S., Industrial Engi-neering, 2014); industrial engineering undergraduates and graduate students Jessica Burke, Colyn Dickson, Liang Li, Lauryl Nakagawa, Heidi Richard-son and Andrea Schmidt; aerospace engineering graduate student Blake Currie; and engineering graduate student Roopak Mitra.

n Materials Engineering

Kathy Chen, chair, was invited to give the keynote speech at Super STEM Saturday, Teacher Leadership Capacity Collaborative for 3rd-5th grade teach-ers. She spoke about “Engineering Pathways to Engineering.” Chen is working with Cal Poly’s Center for Excellence in STEM Educa-tion to teach a course on “Mentors in Out of School Time” to infuse engi-neering into the Bright Futures after school programs.

n Mechanical Engineering

Mason Medizade served on the technical committee of the Society of Petroleum Engineers Western Regional Meeting held in Anaheim, Calif., where he also chaired two sessions on Frac-turing Technologies and Facilities and Water Management. Medizade also co-authored “Analysis of Five Different Cyclic Steam Stimulation Projects in California’s Opal-A Diatomite” present-ed at the conference. Medizade helped facilitate a dona-

tion from Bryan Research & Engineer-ing of a 50-seat license for its Promax process simulation software. Used worldwide to design aspects of fluid processing plant design and air emis-sions studies, the technology enables new curriculum development and helps prepare Cal Poly mechanical engineer-ing and environmental engineering students for professional careers.

n n n

Steffen Peuker, James L. Bartlett, Jr. Endowed Professor, and instructor Jennifer Mott were awarded the Ser-vice Learning Faculty Fellows award. Sponsored by the Center for Com-munity Engagement and the Center for Teaching, Learning, and Technol-ogy, the awards recognize Peuker and Mott for their incorporation of service learning outreach into the mechanical engineering freshmen activity course. Freshmen students design hands-on demonstrations of engineering principles and present them to grade school students from underserved local schools to promote interest in STEM education.

n n n

Mohammad Noori co-authored “Modal Analysis of Cable-Tower Sys-tem of Twin-Span Suspension Bridge” published in the Journal of Vibroengi-neering (Vol. 19, issue 4, pp. 1850-1863, 2014), and “System-Reliability-Based Optimization for Truss Structures Using Genetic Algorithm and Neural Net-work” published in the International Journal of Reliability and Safety (Vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 51-69, 2014). Noori presented a poster on “Dam-age Detection of Plate-Like Structures Using Computational Intelligence Concepts” at a conference on Struc-tural Health Monitoring and Inspection of Advanced Materials, Aerospace, and Civil Infrastructure IX, part of SPIE Smart Structures/NDE 2015 held in San Diego. He participated in the Distinguished Seminar in Structural Engineering at UCLA, where he dis-cussed “Overview of Structural Health Monitoring and Some Recent Work in Emerging Areas.” Noori serves as a member of ASEE’s Executive Working Group on Engineer-ing Access and Affordability.”

n n n

Brian Self and James Widmann pre-sented and published “WIP: Learning

Page 21: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

The Cal Poly Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering class of 1964 reunited in San Luis Obispo in October to celebrate its 50th reunion. The classmates included, left to right,: Don Hilmer, Steve Ford, Bob Young, Jon Monett, Gene Borg, Burt Adams, Larry Meyer, Joe Morgan, Del Chesebro, Dave Hansen, Bob Martin, Don Jaques and Worth Holmes.

IME 50th

2000sGurpal Bhoot (B.S., Electrical Engineering, 2012)

Alumnus’ Smart Thermometer Connects to your iPhone California-based Swaive, founded by Cal Poly alumnus Gurpal Bhoot, aims to launch its infrared ear thermometer dur-ing the first quarter of 2015. The device connects to iPhones via Bluetooth to help users track whether a fever is trend-ing up or down. bit.ly/1FU2UIJ

Aaron Rivera and Mark Paddon(B.S., Computer Science, 2012)

Alumni’s App is Top Tour Guide Sidekick After a graduation trip to Machu Picchu, Aaron Rivera, Mark Paddon and some friends decided to develop an application that would serve as a tour guide sidekick. Their app, Guidekick, is a travel guide, an audiobook and a tour guide wrapped into one cell phone-sized package that users can keep in their pockets. bit.ly/1rUJmh9

Jason L. Anderson (B.S./M.S., Computer Science, 2010)

Cloud Architect at IBM Cloud Labs Jason Anderson, a cloud architect for IBM Cloud Labs, was a presenter at the 2014 Cloud Expo on technologies in-cluding Cloud Foundry and OpenStack. His previous roles at the company have included product development and solution enablement. bit.ly/1yRyPKd

Alumni i n t h e n e w s

21

Faculty NewsAlumni News

1990s Wade Horton (B.S., Environmental Engineering, 1998)

Public Works Director for San Luis Obispo County Last fall, Wade Horton was hired by the County of San Luis Obispo as its new public works director. Formerly deputy director of the utilities depart-ment for the City of San Luis Obispo, Horton is now responsible for oversee-ing the operations of the county’s public works department, which has approxi-mately 190 full-time employees. bit.ly/1Epcd4y bit.ly/1tQojkc

Rosemarie Gaglione (B.S., Environmental Engineering, 1997)

Director of Public Works for City of Goleta Rosemarie Gaglione was named city

public works director in Goleta, Calif., after serving as the interim director. She has worked for the city since 2007 as senior project manager and was named capital improvement program manager in July 2008. bit.ly/10F5rZB

Kennan Beard (B.S., Metallurgical & Materials Engineering, 1990)

CEO Knows How to Run a Railway Kennan Beard was named CEO of the Sierra Northern Railway. He has more than 20 years of experience in railroad operations, most recently as the chief operating officer of the Modesto & Empire Traction Co. and the Beard Land Improvement Co. in Modesto. A fifth-generation railroader, Beard’s experience includes track design and construction, locomotive design and operation, and intermodal operations.bit.ly/143bSqT

Clement Huang(B.S., Computer Science, 1997)

Chief Product Officer for China’s Leading Mobile Ad Platform China’s leading mobile ad platform company, Madhouse, appointed Clem-ent Huang chief product officer. Huang moved from Yahoo USA, where he was responsible for building and managing the product team to create Yahoo’s new Programmatic Buying Platform. prn.to/1KmJAsD

Alex Go (B.S., Electrical Engineering, 1991)

Freed Associates Names New Client Executive Freed Associates, a California-based healthcare consultancy, appointed Alex Go as client executive. Prior to his posi-tion with Freed, Go served as founder and CEO at Livewell Health, a tech-nology-enabled services provider that

Page 22: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Alumni Newsassists seniors with living independently at home and families seeking assistance for senior care.

1980sDaniel McIntyre (B.S., Civil Engineering, 1989)

New District Engineering Service Manager Daniel McIntyre, public works direc-tor for the City of Livermore, joined the Dublin San Ramon Services District as engineering services manager in Febru-ary. McIntyre has been with the City of Livermore for almost all of his 25-year career. He joined the city’s engineering division in 1990 and became city engi-neer in 2000. aol.it/1tzPLUX

Keay T. Nakae (B.S., Electronic Engineering, 1989)

New Senior Healthcare Analyst at Chardan Capital Markets Keay Nakae joined Chardan Capital as senior healthcare research analyst. He has more than 15 years of experience as a sell-side research analyst covering healthcare companies and previously worked at Ascendiant Capital Markets. prn.to/1zivFOt

Leonard Pieroni (B.S., Mechanical Engineering, 1986)

Elected to City Council of La Cañada Flintridge Leonard Pieroni was elected to a seat on the La Cañada Flintridge City Council in March. Pieroni is project man-ager at WorleyParsons, an international engineering firm with offices in Monro-via, Calif. bit.ly/1pwAiTU

Cindi Christenson (B.S., Mechanical Engineering, 1982)

First Female Registrar of California’s Contractors State License Board The new registrar of contractors in California has the distinction of be-ing the first female appointed by the Contractors State License Board (CSLB) in its 85-year history. Cindi Christenson assumed her new duties on Jan. 1. A lawyer and mechanical engineer,

Alumnus and Former Professor Honored for International Cooperation

Exploring Space at ScaleAlums work on models of James Webb Space Telescope

Aerospace engineering alums Chas Carlson, right, Reed Danis and Paul Innes worked on models (1/20th version shown) of the James Webb Space Telescope at Genesis Engineering Solutions in San Luis Obispo.

The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) presented

the 2015 International Cooperation Award to Cal Poly alumnus Russell Cum-mings and Andrea Schuette, a research engineer at the German Aerospace Cen-ter. The award recognizes leadership of multiple international teams investigat-ing stability of air and sea vehicles using

computational simu-lation. The award will be presented at the AIAA Gala Awards ceremony in Wash-ington D.C. in May.

A Cal Poly alum-nus (B.S., Aerospace Engineering, 1977; M.S., Aerospace Engineering, 1985; B.A., Music, 1999), Cummings taught in the Aerospace

Engineering Department from 1986 to 2005, serving as chair from 1992 to 1995. He is now a professor of aeronautics at the U.S. Air Force Academy and an AIAA associate fellow.

For their work, the largest NATO research program of its kind, Cummings and Schuette led a multinational team of 46 researchers from 14 NATO member states. The group produced a data set, based on computational fluid dynamics, which is especially critical to understand-ing aircraft moving at different speeds through the air and ships encountering unpredictable sea dynamics.

Cumming and Schuette also received the 2012 NATO Research & Technology Organisation Scientific Achievement Award, which is the highest award that NATO gives for group research. Ad-ditionally, Cummings was awarded the 2009 Frank J. Seiler Research Award from the U.S. Air Force Academy; an AIAA 2004 Sustained Service Award; the 2002 U.S. Air Force Science and Engineering Award; and the 1994 AIAA National Faculty Advisor Award.n

A team of Cal Poly aerospace en-gineers has helped create a new

model of space exploration. Their 1/6-scale model of the giant James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) went on a national tour to introduce the public to a space mission that is in-tended to provide a first look at what happened right after the Big Bang.

In 2018, NASA plans to launch the JWST to succeed the Hubble Space Telescope, which has been in orbit since 1990. It is a particularly ambi-tious engineering project because the 21-foot primary mirror and sunshield are folded to fit into a tiny capsule at the top of a rocket and then unfurl — in a meticulously arranged sequence of actions — in space.

“The James Webb has 30 such actions — called deployments,” said Colin Burt (B.S./M.S., Aerospace Engineering, 2013). “When fully de-ployed in space, the sunshield will be the size of a tennis court, or half the size of a 727 passenger jet.”

“Up until we designed this model, there wasn’t anything to help the public understand the complexity of the deployments,” said Chas Carlson (B.S., Aerospace Engineering, 2013).

But in 2010, then-students Burt, Carlson, Paul Innes (B.S., Aerospace Engineering, 2012), Mark Costa (B.S., Aerospace Engineering, 2011) and Adam Chase (B.S./M.S., Aerospace Engineering, 2014), were tapped as interns to design and build a 1/6-scale

model of the James Webb as a public outreach tool.

Since 2012, when the project was completed at Cal Poly’s Tech Park, the replica has wowed enthusiastic crowds at space centers and visitor centers across the country. During a typical 20-minute public demonstra-tion, the audience sees the solar array unfold behind the telescope, the sunshield open up, and the 18-seg-ment mirror come together to form one complete mirror.

Following their JWST model project, professional opportunities for the Cal Poly graduates have also expanded. The startup they worked for, Exploration Systems, merged with Genesis Engineering Solutions, a space and technology company based in Maryland.

“Exploration Systems had a knowledge base and capabilities that Genesis didn’t, and vice versa,” said Carlson. “The merger’s given us a lot more tools in the toolbox.”

In addition to original team mem-bers Burt, Carlson and Innes, their current team includes Reed Danis (B.S., Aerospace Engineering, 2012).

Burt and Carlson’s model work has also led to another big opportunity: both alumni are contracted by NASA for systems engineering and inte-gration testing on the actual James Webb flight project at Northrop Grumman Space Park in Redondo Beach, Calif. n

Russell Cummings Aerospace Engineering

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Page 23: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Ted and Dick Melsheimer take a family code of ethics to heart: work hard, give back.The brothers, both Cal Poly mechanical engi-

neering alumni, have worked hard to build family businesses, and both have established long habits of generous support for the College of Engineering.

Ted (B.S., Mechanical Engineering, 1959) is president of Mustang Manufacturing, the Carson City, Nev., business he founded that makes squeeze valves for natural gas pipelines. Three generations of his family are now involved in the business, in-cluding his wife Sharon, daughter Susan, son Steve (B.S., Engineering Technology, 1992) and grand-daughter Lyndsey.

Dick (B.S., Mechanical Engineering, 1961) is presi-dent of Melfred Borzall, the company his father, Fred Melsheimer, started in 1946 as Melfred Welding.

Through Ted and Dick’s focus on the people and the overall environment of their respective organiza-tions, they have created model company cultures — in addition to building the top manufacturing companies in their fields.

Ted’s path to success began in 1967 when he began work with DuPont to develop a tool that would control the flow of gas through a pipe made of a revolutionary new material called polyethylene. He built a business that still leads the power-driven hand tools industry as the only company whose sole focus is squeeze tools. By concentrating all its resources on squeezing pipe, Mustang Manufacturing has gained the reputation of

making the most efficient pipes in the industry.Melfred Borzall, which will mark its 70th anniversary

next year, is one of the leading manufacturers of hori-zontal directional drilling (HDD) tools and supplies.

Dick was recently honored as a Legend of HDD for 50 years of innovations that have improved the tools and technologies used to install underground utili-ties. The award was presented by the North American Society for Trenchless Technology in recognition of Dick’s work on hydraulic drilling equipment for installing underground utilities, the electronic drill bit locator, the electric strike alarm for HDD, and the use of electric-over-hydraulic control valves.

Melfred Borzall, known for its red tools, also aims to be as green as possible. The company’s long-term commitment to protecting the environment is reflected in the 64,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art manufactur-ing plant in Santa Maria, Calif. The facility includes a

photovoltaic system of almost 1,000 solar panels that produces enough power to supply about 90 percent of the plant’s electricity.

The company is also recognized as a good place to work. During the recent recession, Melfred Borzall avoided employee layoffs through a furlough program and continued to move ahead with much-needed expansion. As a result, when the economy improved, employees were able to return to full-time schedules with a company poised and ready to compete in new and expanding markets.

“Our father’s education stopped at the ninth grade,” said Ted, “but he was a wonderful mechanic; an innova-tive engineer. He always stressed the work ethic: ‘Do what you do well and get an education you can use!’ I think it made Pop proud to have Dick and me at Cal Poly. Of course, the education we received directly ap-plied to our careers.”n

Alumni News

Melsheimer family from left: Peter, Dick and Eric of Melfred Borzall; Steve, Sharon, Lyndsey Snowden, Susan Yturiaga and Ted of Mustang Manufacturing.

Christenson has served as chief deputy registrar of the Sacramento-based board. The organization regulates and licenses the state’s construction industry and licenses nearly 300,000 contractors in more than 40 classifications.bit.ly/1KcOPZ5

Jeff Tolman (B.S., Computer Science, 1986)

Software Engineer’s Career Now in a New Key Jeff Tolman is the new director of the Petaluma Chorale in Petaluma, Calif. After 18 years working as a software en-gineer, Tolman decided to pursue a life of music. He moved to Creston, Iowa, to attend the School for Music Vocation, led by famous jazz arranger Phil Mattson; fin-ished his music education at Sacramento State; and moved back to Petaluma, the town he calls home.dbit.ly/1yW4lXc

Randy Iwasaki (B.S., Civil Engineering, 1982)

New Chair of National Freight Advisory Committee The U.S. Department of Transporta-tion appointed Randy Iwasaki as execu-tive director of the Contra Costa Trans-portation Authority. He will also serve as the chair of the National Freight Advisory Committee.aol.it/1EbrkN4

Richard C. Holzer (B.S., Environmental Engineering - HVAC, 1980)

New Managing Principal Engineer at Southland Industries Southland Industries, one of the nation’s largest mechanical, engineer-ing and plumbing building system companies, welcomed Richard Holzer as

the managing principal engineer of its Southern California division. He will pro-vide leadership for the division’s design engineering, building information model-ing and constructability departments, and offer strategic guidance for South-land’s growing engineering services at regional and national levels.

Wolfgang Struss (B.S., Electronic Engineering, 1980)

Interim President and CEO of MicroPlanet Wolfgang Struss was tapped to serve as interim president and chief executive officer of MicroPlanet. In this role, Struss will lead the company’s focus on increas-ing and financing the market penetration of its “best in class” low-voltage regula-tor products in Australia.mwne.ws/1xWo9HY

1970sWilliam H. Swanson (B.S., Industrial Engineering, 1973) STEM Leadership Hall of Fame Honoree William H. (Bill) Swanson was among the honorees at the U.S. News & World Report’s 2014 STEM Leadership Hall of Fame. U.S. News sought out leaders who have achieved measurable results in the science, technology, engineering and math fields; challenged established processes and conventional wisdom; inspired a shared vision; and motivated legions of aspiring STEM professionals. Swanson is chair of the Cal Poly Founda-tion board.bit.ly/1Dl3EGM n

Two Brothers, Two Successes

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Page 24: Cal Poly Engineering Advantage - Spring 2015

Join us for the COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING

PROJECT EXPO Friday, April 29 • 2:30 – 6 p.m.Featuring more than 200 individual and team projects, the event represents the culmination of one to two years of student-led project inno-vation. It’s an ideal time to interact with project spon-sors, faculty and especially students.

n SCHEDULE OF EVENTS 2:30 - 3:30 p.m. Outstanding Graduation Senior Awards 3:30 - 6 p.m. Project Exhibition

n CONTACT 805-756-2131

To learn how you can work with student teams or sponsor projects, contact Associate Dean Rakesh Goel at [email protected].

California Polytechnic State University College of Engineering

1 Grand Ave.San Luis Obispo, CA

93407-0350

CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED

Parents please note: If your son or daughter is no longer at this address, please share

his or her current address with the College of Engineering

COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING ceng.calpoly.eduDean’s Office (805) 756-2131Debra Larson, Dean [email protected] Fred DePiero, Associate Dean [email protected] Goel, Associate Dean [email protected] AdvancementRichard LeRoy, Asst. Dean (805) 756-7108 [email protected] Oeser, Dir. of Development (805) 756-5711 [email protected] Burgoon, Admin. Support (805) 756-5374 [email protected] Marketing & Communications (805) 756-6402Amy Hewes, Director [email protected] Clark, Web Administrator (805) 756-6582 [email protected] Ricard, Writer (805) 756-6623 [email protected] Steers, Photography & Design (805) 756-7167 [email protected] Advising (805) 756-1461Kim Marsalek, Coordinator [email protected] Engineering Program (805) 756-1433Maria Manzano, Coordinator [email protected] in Engineering Program (805) 756-2350Helene Finger, Director [email protected] Engineering (805) 756-2562Eric Mehiel, Chair [email protected] & General Engineering (805) 756-6400Richard Savage, Chair [email protected]/Environmental Engineering (805) 756-2947Daniel Jansen, Chair [email protected] Engineering (805) 756-1229John Oliver, Director [email protected] Science/Software Engineering (805) 756-2824Ignatios Vakalis, Chair [email protected] Engineering (805) 756-2781Dennis Derickson, Chair [email protected] & Manufacturing Engineering (805) 756-2341Jose Macedo, Chair [email protected] Engineering (805) 756-2568Kathy Chen, Chair [email protected] Engineering (805) 756-1334James Meagher, Chair [email protected] Protection Engineering (805) 756-7834Fred Mowrer, Director [email protected]

Engineering Advantage is a biannual publication of the College of Engineering, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Editorial Staff: Amy Hewes | Publications Director

• Galen Ricard | Staff Writer • Dennis Steers | Photography & Design

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