These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
Archive – June 2010
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
These lectures serve as a primer on the science of combustion. They constitute the core of a summer school lecture program organized by Princeton's Combustion Energy Frontier Research Center (CEFRC), which is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The courses were taught by Norbert Peters, a professor of RWTH-Aachen, in Germany, Dr. Charles K. Westbrook of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Dr. Stephen J. Klippenstein of the Argonne National Laboratory.
For further informatio
Denise Mauzerall combines science and policy in analyzing the effects of air pollution on climate change, human health and agricultural production. She has emerged as a leader in using atmospheric models to track the flow of pollution, helping to identify where reductions of harmful emissions would have the largest benefit.
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and camarad
Princeton University President Shirley M. Tilghman, a distinguished molecular biologist, discusses the role of women in science -- past, present and future.
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
A Pakistani garbage dump seems like an unlikely place to find a solution to extreme poverty. But then again, the group of students from Princeton and Rutgers universities who plan to convert garbage into hope is an unlikely team.
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and camarad
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and ca
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and camarad
The 2010 ”Women in Theory” workshop was hosted by Princeton's Center for Computational Intractability and is intended for graduate and undergraduate students working in theoretical computer science. It features technical talks and tutorials by senior and junior women in the field.
The motivation for the workshop was two-fold: to deliver an invigorating educational program and to bring together women from different departments in order to foster a sense of kinship and camarad
The School of Engineering and Applied Science has named its visiting professorship in entrepreneurship in honor of former dean James Wei on the occasion of Wei's retirement. Established in 2007, the professorship will now be known as the James Wei Visiting Professorship in Entrepreneurship.
Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, who graduated from Princeton in 1986 with a degree in computer science and electrical engineering, gave the Baccalaureate address to Princeton's Class of 2010.
Several engineering faculty recently received teaching awards from the University, the engineering school and student groups.
Princeton Engineering celebrated the achievements of its 2010 graduates at the engineering school Class Day ceremony Monday, May 31, with awards for scholarship, service and athletics.
