Building bridges to engineering's future
Media Release
11 July 2006
Building bridges to
engineering's future
How will engineering change our lives in the future? This question is at the centre of a series of Winter Lectures being held at the University of Auckland to mark the Faculty of Engineering's centenary.
Engineering Technologies: For Today and Tomorrow is a series of six-weekly lectures, each focussing on a different engineering discipline and featuring leading professors from each field. The lectures will all be held at the Maidment Theatre, 8 Alfred Street, from 1 to 2pm.
All lectures are free and open to the public.
Engineered Composite
Materials: From Earth to Space
July 25
From
straw-reinforced mud bricks used thousands of years ago, to
materials used in the aircraft industry and space research,
this lecture will trace the development of composite
materials and predict how they will be used in the
future.
Engineering in Biology and Medicine: A Vision into
the Future
August 1
This lecture will outline the
state of this emerging field, which uses mathematical tools
to develop models of human organs. These can be manipulated
to represent actual events in the body. These models can be
used to discover new drug targets and predict drug
interactions in humans at a cellular, organ or complete body
level. Research developed within the Bioengeneering
Institute at the University will be presented.
Challenges
in Electronic Engineering: What Have We Learned from the
Past and What Will the Next Ten Years Bring?
August
8
The idea of inductive power transfer (transferring
power through a magnetic field rather than direct contact
between two objects) has languished for some time as being
practically impossible. But new developments mean this
technology is now used commercially and it is growing
rapidly.
Civil Engineering for Life
August 15
Water
and shelter, two basic needs of human existence, are
addressed in terms of emerging technologies and their
relevance to New Zealand. Issues will include engineering
developments designed to mitigate the effects of droughts,
floods and earthquakes.
>From No. 8 Wire to the Nano
World: A Pilgrimage from Classical Engineering Materials to
the Ultra High-Performance Materials of Today and
Tomorrow
August 22
Gigantic leaps in our understanding
of materials is producing an ever-expanding range of
super-materials and nano-materials, with undreamed of levels
of strength, performance and other physical properties that
vastly surpass those of that kiwi icon, No. 8
wire.
Engineering Science: Creating the Future using
Mathematical Models
August 29
There has been enormous
growth in the use of computer models to solve real problems
in engineering, such as oil exploration, geothermal field
modelling and wind turbine design. This lecture will focus
on the theme of energy to demonstrate this and asks, what
will even faster computers with larger memories allow us to
model?
The Winter Lectures Series is one of a number of Faculty of Engineering centennial celebration events which will conclude with an open day on 18 November.
ENDS