The Penn State Waste Stream Task Force has invited members of the Penn State community to a town hall meeting. The purpose of the town hall is to present a draft of its waste stream report and answer questions from the community. It will take place at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16 in 233 HUB-Robeson Center. The town hall is free and open to the public.
The town hall will also be live streamed via Zoom https://psu.zoom.us/j/386512123
Past Events: Penn State Energy and Environment Calendar Archive
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1:00 – 2:00pm
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Dr. Jackson-Smith is a rural sociologist who uses social science research tools and collaborations with interdisciplinary teams to study the human dimensions of complex agricultural and environmental change. His work often involves participatory approaches that engage stakeholders directly in the design, conduct, and analysis of scientific research and modeling.
Management of the N cycle has been identified as one of the Grand Challenges in the 21st century by the National Academy of Engineering, highlighting needs for further research using integrated management approaches. In a wastewater treatment plant, aeration accounts for about 40-60% of energy consumption for organic C and N removal. Innovative technologies are necessary to reduce the energy consumption in wastewater treatment and recover resources from waste streams.
Management of the N cycle has been identified as one of the Grand Challenges in the 21st century by the National Academy of Engineering, highlighting needs for further research using integrated management approaches. In a wastewater treatment plant, aeration accounts for about 40-60% of energy consumption for organic C and N removal. Innovative technologies are necessary to reduce the energy consumption in wastewater treatment and recover resources from waste streams.
The G. Albert Shoemaker Lecture Series in Mineral Engineering was established in 1992 by Mercedes G. Shoemaker to honor the memory of her husband, a Pittsburgh civic and industrial leader dedicated to the support of higher education. G. Albert Shoemaker graduated from Penn State in 1923 with a bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering and went on to lead an eminent career in the mineral industries.
Geochemistry Forum
341 Deike Building @ 3:30 PM
Allison Karp, PhD Student, Department of Geoscience, Penn State
“Molecular answers to burning questions: Novel biogeochemical tools in paleofire ecology”
The social causes and consequences of individuals faced with environmental change
Dr. Denis Réale, University of Quebec, Montreal
April 12, 2019 @ 02:30 pm to 03:30 pm
107 Forest Resources Building
University Park
Ecology Spring Seminar Series 2019 “Behave like an Ecologist: Research Exploring Behavioral Ecology” Fridays 2:30-3:30
CLIMA Seminar
117 Earth – Engineering Science Building @ 3:45 PM
Sanjib Sharma, PhD candidate, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Penn State
"Hydrologic Systems Modeling and Analysis Using Weather and Climate Ensembles"
Time is running out for our coral reefs--and it’s in our best interest to understand and protect these diverse ecosystems. Join Dr. Baums as we discuss the future of preserving our reefs against the rising tide of climate change.
Please join us for an open house that highlights IEE, MRI, and Huck research facilities. Enjoy wine, beer, and cheese while you network with colleagues. The open house will take place on:
April 10, 2019
4–6 p.m.
The Nittany Lion Inn
Learn about the equipment and services available to researchers at Penn State. Meet the research staff from:
Meteorology & Atmospheric Science Mini-Symposium, Colloquium
112 Walker Building @ 3:30 PM
Suuki Manabe, GFDL Senior Meteorologist, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, Princeton University
“Exploring Global Warming by Climate Models”
Professor Don A. Dillman (Washington State University) will deliver the lecture "How Web-Push Surveys have Revolutionized Data Collection Throughout the World," on Wednesday, April 10, 2019, at 2:00 pm in Room 233AB of the HUB. In this presentation, Professor Dillman will discuss the reasons for the widespread adoption of web-push surveys in order to collect high-quality data. He will also describe the research he has done during the past decade to make these methods effective and outline new challenges being faced in keeping web-push data collection effective.
Energy & Environmental Economics & Policy (EEEP) Seminar
157 Hosler Building @ 12:00 PM
Dr. Carolyn Kousky, Executive Director, Wharton Risk Management & Decision Processes Center, University of Pennsylvania
“The Future of Flood Insurance”
ESSC Brown Bag: Climate Dynamics Seminar
529 Walker Building @ 11:15 AM
Dr. James Rupport, Meteorology and Atmospheric Science, Penn State
“Diurnal Forcing and Phase locking of Equatorial Gravity Waves in the Maritime Continent”
Geosciences Colloquium Series
Pre-talk Coffee & Cookies Reception @ the EMS Museum, Ground Floor, Deike @ 3:45 PM;
Lecture 4:00 PM @ 22 Deike Building
Kerry Key, Associate Professor, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University
“Electromagnetic Imagining of Plate Tectonics and Crustal Margins”
Stakeholder engagement has been touted as an effective means to address difficult natural resource challenges. Engagement has the promise of creating more effective long-term solutions by bringing local and scientific knowledge and allowing resource managers to collectively define and champion solutions. How-ever, these outcomes are far from certain, are resource and time intensive, and require expertise not always available to organizations tasked with addressing resource issues.
Energy Engineering Faculty Candidate Lecture
157 Hosler Building @ 10:00 AM
Yi-Pei Li, Massachusetts Institute of Technology ENENG Faculty Candidate
“Engineering Chemical Reactions with Quantum Mechanics and Machine Learning”
Geochemistry Forum presents Robert M. Holder, Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Johns Hopkins University “Metamorphism and the Evolution of Plate Tectonics”
The Penn State Center for Security Research and Education (CSRE) and the Penn State Journal of Law and International Affairs (JLIA) are proud to present their Spring 2019 Symposium: Security and the Autonomous Future.
Join Penn State Faculty and other invited national experts to explore how autonomous systems will affect our personal, national, and global security.
Gina McCarthy, the 13th administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), will offer the Future of Science and the World Lecture at 6 p.m. on April 3 in the Freeman Auditorium. She is an American environmental health and air quality expert that continues to discuss the importance of science communication and advocacy.
The lecture is hosted by the Penn State Science Policy Society.