MAE Seminar Series - Spacecraft Docking Interactions
Friday, September 5, 2025 1:30–2:45 PM
- LocationENG I: 327: ENG I: 327
- DescriptionJoin the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering for the next lecture in the MAE Seminar Series. This week, alumnus Anthony Terracciano of Aegis Aerospace will present "Characterization of Spacecraft Thruster Plumes via Augmented View Factor Methods for Spacecraft Docking Interactions."
- Websitehttps://events.ucf.edu/event/3939113/mae-seminar-series-spacecraft-docking-interactions/
More from Speaker/Lecture/Seminar
- Sep 99:00 AMHow to Start Your BusinessIf you're thinking of starting a business, it's important to take the right steps. This two-and-a-half-hour virtual webinar will give you an overview of what to know, important actions to take, and best practices on how to avoid common missteps to give your company its greatest chance of success.Learn about the journey from pre-venture to start-up to opening your business as this training covers:* Business legal entity selection * Registration and licensing * Market research and planning * Financial planning and sources of capital * And more…Register today!Virtual Location URL: https://events.blackthorn.io/en/6g3Q8Wa7/how-to-start-your-business-5a1eVO8PgVh/overview Registration Link: https://events.blackthorn.io/en/6g3Q8Wa7/how-to-start-your-business-5a1eVO8PgVh/overview
- Sep 1012:30 PMCafe francophone* Vous voulez ameliorer votre français oral? (Would you like to improve your French speaking skills?) * Vous aimeriez connaitre des etudiant.e.s qui ont la meme passion que vous pour la langue française?(Would you like to meet students who share your passion for the French language?)Bienvenu.e.s au cafe francophone! Venez echanger avec vos collegues etudiant.e.s dans une ambiance decontractee. (Welcome to the French cafe! Come and chat with your colleagues in a relaxed atmosphere.)Pour qui? Les etudiant.e.s de niveau 2000 (intermediaire) et +, ou etudiant.e.s francophones. (For students at the 2000 level (intermediate) or higher, or French speakers)
- Sep 1012:30 PMWriters in the Sun SeriesThe Department of English invites you to a special Writers in the Sun event: a bilingual reading of Camille's Lakou, a newly published novel by Marie Leticee (Vanderbilt University Press), translated by Kevin Meehan. The event is co-sponsored by the Department of Modern Languages, the Latin American, Caribbean and Latinx Studies Program, and the Center for Digital Humanities and Research.
- Sep 1110:00 AMBusiness Plan Writing Made EasierVirtual eventYour business needs a roadmap for every stage of its growth. We'll remove the mystery of how to create a business plan, the information that should be included and how to use it as a tool to keep your company on track for long term growth.Virtual Location URL: https://events.blackthorn.io/en/6g3Q8Wa7/business-plan-writing-made-easier-webinar-5a1eVO8Pi7h/overview Registration Link: https://events.blackthorn.io/en/6g3Q8Wa7/business-plan-writing-made-easier-webinar-5a1eVO8Pi7h/overview
- Sep 1211:00 AMCREOL Fall Colloquium: Maxim Shcherbakov, University of California, IrvineTitle: Quantum Optics and Confinement Control in Engineered Photonic NanomaterialsAbstract: Naturally abundant materials--such as silicon, metals and van der Waals (vdW) materials--exhibit excellent optical properties, making them well-suited for use in both classical and quantum photonic integrated circuits. By sculpting these materials under extreme conditions, including high pressure, mechanical strain and intense light fields, one can unlock vast opportunities for on-demand engineering of their photonic properties. In the first part of the talk, we will employ thermomechanical processing under carefully controlled pressures and temperatures, allowing for record-rate manipulation of 1D and 2D vdW materials, as well as modulation of phonon-polariton dispersion by more than 10% through stoichiometric control. We will proceed to show that engineered photonic integrated circuits enable multimodal addressing of tightly spaced trapped-ion chains. Finally, we will demonstrate that bright single-photon sources can be realized through the use of tailored nanophotonic resonators and atomic-scale material design. Such extreme-engineered materials open new frontiers in nanophotonics, offering powerful modalities for creating optoelectronic devices with tunable properties for telecommunications and quantum information technologies.About the Speaker: Maxim Shcherbakov is an assistant professor at the University of California, Irvine, with joint appointments in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Materials Science and Engineering. His research is at the intersection of quantum photonics, nonlinear optics and nanostructures, with a particular focus on quantum-engineered materials for next-generation optical technologies. Before joining UCI, Shcherbakov was a postdoctoral associate at Cornell University, following his Ph.D. in Physics from Lomonosov Moscow State University. His work has been recognized with major honors, including the NSF CAREER Award, the DARPA Young Faculty Award, Director's Award and a Blavatnik Postdoctoral Finalist distinction. He has authored over 60 peer-reviewed publications and leads multiple nationally and internationally funded research efforts in quantum and nonlinear optics.Virtual Location URL: https://ucf.zoom.us/j/93442937025?from=addon
- Sep 166:00 PMTeaching English for Speakers of Other LanguagesIn this session, we will share information about our Master's in TESOL and our Teaching English as a Foreign Language Certificate. We will talk about the programs, the career possibilities, and leave time for open questions.Virtual Location URL: https://applynow.graduate.ucf.edu/register/?id=0b1b15c2-2b18-4c49-8204-265676475e0e Registration Link: https://applynow.graduate.ucf.edu/register/?id=0b1b15c2-2b18-4c49-8204-265676475e0e