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Engineering education at Yale began more than a century before the founding of a School of Engineering. In the first half of the nineteenth century, chemistry professor Benjamin Silliman made fundamental contributions to the fractional distillation of petroleum, and his son, chemistry professor Benjamin Silliman, Jr., commercialized the process as a fuel source. [1]
In May 2015, Bell was named the Mary E. Pinchot Professor of Environmental Health at the Yale School of the Environment. [2] The following year, she established the SEARCH Center (Solutions for Energy, Air, Climate, and Health) for which she received a $10 million, five-year grant from the Environmental Protection Agency to study air pollution ...
Yale University Lucila Ohno-Machado is a biomedical engineer and Deputy Dean for Biomedical Informatics at the Yale University School of Medicine. She is an elected member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation and the National Academy of Medicine .
Originally named the Yale Scientific School, it was renamed in 1861 in honor of Joseph E. Sheffield, a railroad executive. The school was incorporated in 1871. The school was incorporated in 1871. The Sheffield Scientific School helped establish the model for the transition of U.S. higher education from a classical model to one which ...
A systems integrator (or system integrator) is a person or company that specializes in bringing together component subsystems into a whole and ensuring that those subsystems function together, [1] a practice known as system integration. They also solve problems of automation. [2]
Menachem Elimelech (Hebrew: מְנַחֵם אֱלִימֶלֶךְ) is the Nancy and Clint Carlson Professor at Rice University, with joint appointments in the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering and the Department of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering. [1]
Mark Richard Cullen is a physician, scholar, and population health scientist known for his work in occupational medicine.As a professor at Yale and later Stanford University, his research focused on the social, environmental, behavioral and bio-medical determinants of morbidity and mortality in adults, with special emphasis on the role of workplace’in such matters.
Mary Nichols received her bachelor's degree from Cornell in 1966 and her Juris Doctor from Yale Law School in 1971, a time when few women enrolled in law school. [9] She passed the State Bar of California and awarded license #52660 on June 2, 1972.