Technology in transportation
Bachelor's degree
In Maynard (USA)
Description
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Type
Bachelor's degree
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Location
Maynard (USA)
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Start date
Different dates available
This course provides an introduction to the transportation industry's major technical challenges and considerations. For upper level undergraduates interested in learning about the transportation field in a broad but quantitative manner. Topics include road vehicle engineering, internal combustion engines, batteries and motors, electric and hybrid powertrains, urban and high speed rail transportation, water vessels, aircraft types and aerodynamics, radar, navigation, GPS, GIS. Students will complete a project on a subject of their choosing.
Facilities
Location
Start date
Start date
Reviews
Subjects
- GIS
- Engineering
- Industry
- Technology
- Project
- Radar
- GPS
Course programme
Lectures: 2 sessions / week, 1.5 hours / session
This course provides an introduction to the transportation industry's major technical challenges and considerations. For upper level undergraduates interested in learning about the transportation field in a broad but quantitative manner. Topics include road vehicle engineering, internal combustion engines, batteries and motors, electric and hybrid powertrains, urban and high speed rail transportation, water vessels, aircraft types and aerodynamics, radar, navigation, GPS, GIS. Students will complete a project on a subject of their choosing.
This course has no textbook. Readings are derived from websites.
Problem sets will be available in the 'assignments' section of the website. Because of holidays, tests, etc., some problem sets may be provided and will be due on days other than Mondays for some weeks. For the same reason, they may not be assigned for a particular week. Late problem sets will not be accepted.
You are welcome, and encouraged, to work on the assignment problems with fellow students. A good way to learn the material is in small study groups. Such groups work best if members have attempted the problems individually before meeting as a group. Of course, the assignment solution that you turn in should reflect your own understanding, and not that of your fellow students. In other words, do not copy directly from other students. If it is obvious that such direct copying has occurred, we will disallow that homework.
There will be two in-class exams. They are scheduled before Lec #15 and Lec #25 sessions. The exams will be closed book. One sheet of handwritten notes will be allowed during the first exam and two sheets will be allowed during the second exam.
There will be two types of presentations - short in-class presentations (< 3min, one PowerPoint slide) of an interesting practical application of the topic covered in the previous lecture and a final presentation (20min slides, 10min Q&A) predicting future developments of each major type of transportation covered (road, water, rail, air).
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Technology in transportation