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December
23, 2003
UC San Diego Students to Showcase
Undergraduate Research at UC Day 2004
By Doug Ramsey
Two
technology-savvy seniors will represent the University of California,
San Diego (UCSD) at the University of California’s fifth
annual undergraduate research showcase. Ben Maggos and Nick
Statom were selected to present their research as part of UC
Day next March 9 in Sacramento. “This competition highlights
the importance of undergraduate research to California,”
said Cathie Magowan, Director of Science & Technology Research
in the UC Office of the President (UCOP). “Research opportunities
as undergraduates prepare students for careers in science and
technology, and inspire them to go on to graduate work that
ensures continued innovation in California’s leading industries.”
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UCSD
Student Ben Maggos |
Ben Maggos,
Class of ’04, is majoring in Interdisciplinary Computing
and the Arts within the Visual Arts department, as well as Philosophy.
Last summer, he was one of 17 undergraduates on the UCSD campus
who received scholarships to do hands-on research for the California
Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology
[Cal-(IT)2], a joint venture between UCSD and UC Irvine. Maggos
worked with two graduate researchers and faculty advisor Sheldon
Brown, director of the Center for Research in Computing and
the Arts (CRCA), on visualizations of the Cal-(IT)2 Building,
now under construction on the La Jolla campus. “The software
we are developing and using also has great potential for other
work,” said Maggos. “We are providing a testbed
for development of visualization software that can accommodate
large heterogeneous data sets in a variety of environments.”
For Maggos,
the primary research challenge was the conversion of two-dimensional
line drawings and floor plans into interactive 3D models and
multimedia animations. “Initially, I was responsible for
lighting and texturing the 3D models and for discovering or
inventing ways of optimizing the geometry to run in a real-time
interactive environment,” he said. “My involvement
has since evolved to a leadership position in the project.”
Maggos won the Cal-(IT)2 Undergraduate Research Prize for 2003
(shared with electrical engineer Edward Shyu), and his research
will now be showcased in Sacramento.
Nick Statom
is a junior majoring in Mechanical Engineering at UCSD’s
Jacobs School of Engineering. He was nominated by his faculty
advisor, Sarah Gille, a professor in the Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering department as well as Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
For his research on the “Analysis of Sea Breeze Effects
Using QuikSCAT and SeaWinds Scatterometry,” Statom also
works with Stefan Llewellyn Smith, a professor of Environmental
Engineering in the Jacobs School. “The sea breeze effects
are very pertinent to the state of California, because its coastline
is valuable to its subsistence,” said Statom, who also
enjoys the coastline as a championship bodyboarder on the UCSD
surf team. “Environmental effects, weather forecasting,
and the fishing industry are all greatly affected by this phenomenon.”
Statom’s
research is part of a NASA program called Ocean Vector Winds,
which is deploying SeaWinds scatterometers on satellites. Scatterometers
are specialized microwave radars that measure near-surface wind
velocity (both speed and direction) under all weather and cloud
conditions over Earth's oceans. Previous analyses based only
on QuikSCAT satellite data allowed scientists to observe ocean
winds twice per day, but did not permit them to estimate the
detailed structure of the daily sea breeze wind cycle. More
recently, with SeaWinds also deployed on Japan’s ADEOS-II
satellite, Statom and Gille analyzed and compared the measurements
from both space-bound scatterometers of wind, taken four times
a day off southern Baja California. Then they examined the daily
wind cycle, averaged over 155 days, and extended their analysis
to the entire planet. In coastal regions, diurnal variability
corresponds to the land/sea breeze, forced by differential heating
of the land and ocean. Statom worked on analyzing the data with
a goal of evaluating the tandem scatterometer mission's skill
at detecting land/sea breeze effects. He works out of Scripps’
Physical Oceanography Research Division.
UC Day is
sponsored by the Alumni Associations of the statewide university.
In connection with the event, the system-wide UC Office of Research
holds an annual competition to select and showcase two outstanding
abstracts describing research projects from each of the eight
UC undergraduate campuses. Faculty deans nominate a handful
of researchers, and the UC Office of Research makes the final
selections. “The quality of all the research abstracts
was excellent,” noted UCOP’s Magowan. “We
made selections based on merit, the appeal of the topic to an
audience of alumni and legislators, and to achieve a broad representation
of disciplines and research experiences”.
Statom and
Maggos will receive plaques at a UC Day luncheon honoring their
participation, and their posters will subsequently be displayed
outside the Governor's Office in the Capitol Building for one
week.
Note to
Editors: News services are welcome to link to or download Quicktime
visualizations of the Cal-(IT)² Building at http://crca.ucsd.edu/~sheldon/calit2_building_vis/calit2_buildingViz.html
Media Contacts: Doug Ramsey (858) 822-5825
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