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1st Press Release
Office
of Naval Research Awards More Than One-half Million Dollar Grant
to
Cal State L.A. for Seafloor Engineering Research
Los Angeles, CA -- Mark
Tufenkjian (Pasadena resident), a professor of civil engineering at California
State University, Los Angeles, has received a 2003 Research and
Education (REP) grant of $594,253 from the Office of Naval
Research (ONR). Among the 11 awardees nationwide, Tufenkjian
represents the only REP grant recipient from the Western U.S. and the only
professor from the civil engineering discipline. The award is also the
largest grant ever bestowed upon the UniversityÂ’s Department of Civil
Engineering.
Over
the next 3½ years, Tufenkjian and Cal State L.A. civil engineering majors
will conduct research in Seafloor Engineering with engineers at the Naval
Facilities Engineering Service Center in Port Hueneme, California. The
research will develop a mini-cone penetration system for determining
seafloor soil properties to assist in the design of foundations and
mooring elements; test hydraulic models to analyze the stability of
submerged objects on the seafloor; and revise the NavyÂ’s marine
geotechnical engineering handbook to include new and innovative
engineering solutions and technologies.
“This
grant will provide unique and exciting research opportunities for our
students and open doors for future collaborations with the Office of Naval
Research and navy
engineers in Port Hueneme,” said Tufenkjian.
Cal
State L.A. civil engineering undergraduate and graduate students who are
selected to participate in the program will receive a salary as well as a
stipend to cover tuition, books and research-related travel.
Undergraduates who enter the program as freshmen and continue through
their senior year will carry the title of “ONR Scholar.”
The Office of Naval Research
coordinates, executes, and promotes the science and technology programs of
the United States Navy and Marine Corps through schools, universities,
government laboratories, and nonprofit and for-profit organizations. It
provides technical advice to the Chief of Naval Operations and the
Secretary of the Navy and works with industry to improve
technology-manufacturing processes.
The
College of Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology is one of
six colleges at California State University, Los Angeles. It is divided
into five departments––Civil Engineering; Computer Science; Electrical
and Computer Engineering; Mechanical Engineering; and Technology.
Collectively, these departments offer 12 undergraduate programs, four
graduate programs and two teaching credentials. More than 80 faculty and
staff service nearly 1,700 Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology
students. The College fosters a unique study environment where faculty and
staff are pledged to the success of students—an environment where the
average class does not exceed 30 students, and professors know their
students by name, not number. Committed to programs that educate through
theory, practice and experiment, Cal State L.A. graduates highly skilled
engineers, computer scientists and technologists who are prepared to face
the rapidly changing demands of industry, business, education, and
government.
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