Difference between revisions of "User:Slc50"
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− | + | ==About Me== | |
My name is Sofia Calicchio and I am currently a student at Duke University pursuing a degree in Mechanical Engineering. | My name is Sofia Calicchio and I am currently a student at Duke University pursuing a degree in Mechanical Engineering. | ||
− | + | ==Name Pronunciation== | |
− | |||
My name is pronounced similar to Pinocchio. (SO-fee-uh KUH-lick-ee-oh). If you look carefully my last name, Calicchio, and Pinocchio only differ in spelling by 4 letters. | My name is pronounced similar to Pinocchio. (SO-fee-uh KUH-lick-ee-oh). If you look carefully my last name, Calicchio, and Pinocchio only differ in spelling by 4 letters. | ||
− | + | ==Current Courses== | |
− | |||
I would love to meet up with people who have these same courses. Obviously we all share EGR 103, but I am also taking Chemistry 101, Math 212 (yay multivariable -_-) and Writing 101 (Environmental Communications). | I would love to meet up with people who have these same courses. Obviously we all share EGR 103, but I am also taking Chemistry 101, Math 212 (yay multivariable -_-) and Writing 101 (Environmental Communications). | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Interests== | ||
+ | I love being outside and living in the Gothic Wonderland. I am a big Harry Potter fan (if you are too check out this link [http://hpotterfacts.tumblr.com Cool Harry Potter Facts]). Also, I really enjoy working with LaTeX, which is probably weird but that's ok. At least the labs are fun for me! I also am interested in becoming fluent in Italian and Spanish. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Grand Challenge Article== | ||
+ | [http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/01/14/solar-manufacturing-not-so-sunny/ Solar Manufacturing: Not So Sunny], Kate Galbraith, The New York Times, created 14 January 2009, accessed 10 September 2012 (Make solar energy economical) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==MATLAB Demos== | ||
+ | My favortie demo(s) were the 3-D Plots and the 3-D Surface Plots. I know the instructions for the homework assignment said to pick a favorite, but these two demos were very closely related. I liked these demos the best because I've always enjoyed looking at 3-D graphs but have never known how to make them. I was rather excited when I saw that MATLAB has the capability to make these plots. They remind me of Einstein's various theories about the fabric of the universe. I had seen a show that tried to describe his theory about General Relativity (or I think it was over this theory) using one of these 3-D plots, but wasn't able to understand what the plot meant. Now, through MATLAB, I will be able to understand how to read these graphs. |
Latest revision as of 02:26, 12 September 2012
Contents
About Me
My name is Sofia Calicchio and I am currently a student at Duke University pursuing a degree in Mechanical Engineering.
Name Pronunciation
My name is pronounced similar to Pinocchio. (SO-fee-uh KUH-lick-ee-oh). If you look carefully my last name, Calicchio, and Pinocchio only differ in spelling by 4 letters.
Current Courses
I would love to meet up with people who have these same courses. Obviously we all share EGR 103, but I am also taking Chemistry 101, Math 212 (yay multivariable -_-) and Writing 101 (Environmental Communications).
Interests
I love being outside and living in the Gothic Wonderland. I am a big Harry Potter fan (if you are too check out this link Cool Harry Potter Facts). Also, I really enjoy working with LaTeX, which is probably weird but that's ok. At least the labs are fun for me! I also am interested in becoming fluent in Italian and Spanish.
Grand Challenge Article
Solar Manufacturing: Not So Sunny, Kate Galbraith, The New York Times, created 14 January 2009, accessed 10 September 2012 (Make solar energy economical)
MATLAB Demos
My favortie demo(s) were the 3-D Plots and the 3-D Surface Plots. I know the instructions for the homework assignment said to pick a favorite, but these two demos were very closely related. I liked these demos the best because I've always enjoyed looking at 3-D graphs but have never known how to make them. I was rather excited when I saw that MATLAB has the capability to make these plots. They remind me of Einstein's various theories about the fabric of the universe. I had seen a show that tried to describe his theory about General Relativity (or I think it was over this theory) using one of these 3-D plots, but wasn't able to understand what the plot meant. Now, through MATLAB, I will be able to understand how to read these graphs.