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ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE FUTURE OF GPS - INGENIA The improvement in the performance of GPS over the last decade has been phenomenal. Developed originally for the military in the 1970s, and owned and operated by the US Department of Defense, GPS gradually gained a foothold in sea and air navigation. More recently, with improved receivers and auxiliary technologies like map-matching, ithas
INGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - EXTENSIVE GEOLOGICAL RECORDS SHOW HOW PROBLEMS Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
ARTICLES - HOW DOES THAT WORK - KETTLE SWITCH-OFF When a kettle is plugged into an electric outlet and switched on the electric current flows through a metal coil, which is situated either within or under the water. The coil is, in effect, a heating element and its resistance (the material’s efforts to stop electricityflowing
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of their ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE FUTURE OF GPS - INGENIA The improvement in the performance of GPS over the last decade has been phenomenal. Developed originally for the military in the 1970s, and owned and operated by the US Department of Defense, GPS gradually gained a foothold in sea and air navigation. More recently, with improved receivers and auxiliary technologies like map-matching, ithas
INGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - EXTENSIVE GEOLOGICAL RECORDS SHOW HOW PROBLEMS Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
ARTICLES - HOW DOES THAT WORK - KETTLE SWITCH-OFF When a kettle is plugged into an electric outlet and switched on the electric current flows through a metal coil, which is situated either within or under the water. The coil is, in effect, a heating element and its resistance (the material’s efforts to stop electricityflowing
ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - TAILOR-MADE INVENTIONS The brain of the box is a Raspberry Pi 3 (‘Chips that changed the classroom’, Ingenia 72) which relays very close to real-time video to the screen – there are only a couple of hundred milliseconds of delay. There is also a battery backup system for the Raspberry Pi sothat it
ARTICLES - THE FUTURE OF GPS - INGENIA The improvement in the performance of GPS over the last decade has been phenomenal. Developed originally for the military in the 1970s, and owned and operated by the US Department of Defense, GPS gradually gained a foothold in sea and air navigation. More recently, with improved receivers and auxiliary technologies like map-matching, ithas
ARTICLES - HIVES OF ACTIVITY - INGENIA.ORG.UK Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - APPLIED ORIGAMI Origami, from ‘oru’, meaning ‘fold’ and ‘kami’, meaning `paper’, is an ancient Japanese art form that can be traced back to the 17th century. Usually bringing to mind images of paper cranes, at first glance the discipline seems to hold little or no link to that of engineering. However, there is a ARTICLES - LONDON'S DEEPEST TUNNEL AND SHAFTS The Lee Tunnel – the UK water industry’s largest project since its privatisation in 1989 – is the deepest tunnel ever built in London. Richard Sutherden, design manager for the project management team on this Thames Water project, describes the challenges and solutions for the venture that will become operational at the end of the year. ARTICLES - ALGAE-POWERED ARCHITECTURE The establishment of zero- or even surplus-energy buildings is a goal that has been set for sustainable architecture. An apartment block in Hamburg in Germany has been built that uses microalgae placed within its façade to generate heat and biomass. Jan Wurm, an associate director at Arup, was one of the chief designers of the energy system. ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - ENGINEERING THE SPACE BELOW TERMINAL 5 Above ground, Heathrow’s Terminal 5 embraces design and architecture at its best while below ground it hides one of the most notable engineering achievements of its kind anywhere in the world. The three buildings that make up Terminal 5 have a combined floor area greater than all the other Heathrow terminals added together. ARTICLES - WHAT MAKES AN EXCITING ROLLER COASTER? Alton Towers has a new roller coaster ride, Galactica, due to open in April 2016, that will require virtual reality headsets and participants experiencing a level of G-force acceleration greater than that of a real rocket launch.Sarah Griffiths talked to engineers, designers and enthusiasts about the elements that all roller coasters share and what makes some rides scarier than others. ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - ENGINEERING ETHICS A great deal of the literature published on engineering ethics in the USA is concerned with the actions of individual engineers in the face of actual disasters which can be seen to have been preventable. Perhaps the most appalling and thoroughly researched incident ARTICLES - BUILDING THE SHARD - INGENIA SHARD CONCEPT. The Shard is an unusual mixture of concrete and steel, a tiered wedding cake of a building with a concrete basement, structural steel from ground to level 40, concrete from levels 41 to 69, and steel again from there to the top at level 95. ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - HOW DOES THAT WORK - KETTLE SWITCH-OFF When a kettle is plugged into an electric outlet and switched on the electric current flows through a metal coil, which is situated either within or under the water. The coil is, in effect, a heating element and its resistance (the material’s efforts to stop electricityflowing
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - LESSONS FROM WINDSCALE'S NUCLEAR LEGACY In the longer term, the experience from Windscale will help in decommissioning new nuclear power stations. In general terms, this includes reassuring the UK public that the industry can manage the legacy issues surrounding nuclear power. Indeed, the WAGR decommissioning was a European demonstration project, managed by theOECD Nuclear Energy
ARTICLES - WHAT MAKES AN EXCITING ROLLER COASTER? Alton Towers has a new roller coaster ride, Galactica, due to open in April 2016, that will require virtual reality headsets and participants experiencing a level of G-force acceleration greater than that of a real rocket launch.Sarah Griffiths talked to engineers, designers and enthusiasts about the elements that all roller coasters share and what makes some rides scarier than others. ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - ENGINEERING ETHICS A great deal of the literature published on engineering ethics in the USA is concerned with the actions of individual engineers in the face of actual disasters which can be seen to have been preventable. Perhaps the most appalling and thoroughly researched incident ARTICLES - BUILDING THE SHARD - INGENIA SHARD CONCEPT. The Shard is an unusual mixture of concrete and steel, a tiered wedding cake of a building with a concrete basement, structural steel from ground to level 40, concrete from levels 41 to 69, and steel again from there to the top at level 95. ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - HOW DOES THAT WORK - KETTLE SWITCH-OFF When a kettle is plugged into an electric outlet and switched on the electric current flows through a metal coil, which is situated either within or under the water. The coil is, in effect, a heating element and its resistance (the material’s efforts to stop electricityflowing
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - LESSONS FROM WINDSCALE'S NUCLEAR LEGACY In the longer term, the experience from Windscale will help in decommissioning new nuclear power stations. In general terms, this includes reassuring the UK public that the industry can manage the legacy issues surrounding nuclear power. Indeed, the WAGR decommissioning was a European demonstration project, managed by theOECD Nuclear Energy
ARTICLES - WHAT MAKES AN EXCITING ROLLER COASTER? Alton Towers has a new roller coaster ride, Galactica, due to open in April 2016, that will require virtual reality headsets and participants experiencing a level of G-force acceleration greater than that of a real rocket launch.Sarah Griffiths talked to engineers, designers and enthusiasts about the elements that all roller coasters share and what makes some rides scarier than others. ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - LESSONS FROM WINDSCALE'S NUCLEAR LEGACY In the longer term, the experience from Windscale will help in decommissioning new nuclear power stations. In general terms, this includes reassuring the UK public that the industry can manage the legacy issues surrounding nuclear power. Indeed, the WAGR decommissioning was a European demonstration project, managed by theOECD Nuclear Energy
ARTICLES - LONDON'S DEEPEST TUNNEL AND SHAFTS The Lee Tunnel – the UK water industry’s largest project since its privatisation in 1989 – is the deepest tunnel ever built in London. Richard Sutherden, design manager for the project management team on this Thames Water project, describes the challenges and solutions for the venture that will become operational at the end of the year. ARTICLES - EXTENSIVE GEOLOGICAL RECORDS SHOW HOW PROBLEMS Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - BUILDING THE SHARD - INGENIA SHARD CONCEPT. The Shard is an unusual mixture of concrete and steel, a tiered wedding cake of a building with a concrete basement, structural steel from ground to level 40, concrete from levels 41 to 69, and steel again from there to the top at level 95. ARTICLES - RAISING AND CONSERVING THE MARY ROSE RAISING THE MARY ROSE. The first step of the plan to lift the Mary Rose tackled the problem of ‘bottom suction’, whereby the ship was embedded within the silt and clay of the seabed. This was achieved using 12 hydraulic jacks raising a lifting frame slowly , over a period of several days, up its four legs. ARTICLES - WHY RAILS CRACK? - INGENIA The Hatfield train crash in October 2000 brought ‘gauge corner cracking’ to the attention of the British railway industry and to the travelling public. An intercity train left the track because of a fracture in the high or outer rail of a 1,500 metre radius curve. What was unusual about the break was the apparent disintegration of therail
ARTICLES - WHAT MAKES AN EXCITING ROLLER COASTER? Alton Towers has a new roller coaster ride, Galactica, due to open in April 2016, that will require virtual reality headsets and participants experiencing a level of G-force acceleration greater than that of a real rocket launch.Sarah Griffiths talked to engineers, designers and enthusiasts about the elements that all roller coasters share and what makes some rides scarier than others. ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of their ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineersINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - TAILOR-MADE INVENTIONS - INGENIA.ORG.UK The brain of the box is a Raspberry Pi 3 (‘Chips that changed the classroom’, Ingenia 72) which relays very close to real-time video to the screen – there are only a couple of hundred milliseconds of delay. There is also a battery backup system for the Raspberry Pi sothat it
ARTICLES - HOW DOES THAT WORK - KETTLE SWITCH-OFF When a kettle is plugged into an electric outlet and switched on the electric current flows through a metal coil, which is situated either within or under the water. The coil is, in effect, a heating element and its resistance (the material’s efforts to stop electricityflowing
ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of their ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineersINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - TAILOR-MADE INVENTIONS - INGENIA.ORG.UK The brain of the box is a Raspberry Pi 3 (‘Chips that changed the classroom’, Ingenia 72) which relays very close to real-time video to the screen – there are only a couple of hundred milliseconds of delay. There is also a battery backup system for the Raspberry Pi sothat it
ARTICLES - HOW DOES THAT WORK - KETTLE SWITCH-OFF When a kettle is plugged into an electric outlet and switched on the electric current flows through a metal coil, which is situated either within or under the water. The coil is, in effect, a heating element and its resistance (the material’s efforts to stop electricityflowing
ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
ARTICLES - HIVES OF ACTIVITY - INGENIA.ORG.UK Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
CONTENTS
Sustainability underpins our work and the firm is the creative force behind many of the world’s most innovative and sustainable buildings, transport and civil engineering projects. Established in 1946, Arup has over 12,800 employees based in 89 offices, workingacross
ARTICLES - AERO-ENGINES OF THE FUTURE A typical figure for fuel burn of today’s modern aircraft is 0.035 litres per passenger per km (81 miles per gallon per passenger). To achieve the full 50% reduction in fuel burn from 2000 levels demanded by ACARE, 20% will be reduced from the engines and 20% from ARTICLES - TAILOR-MADE INVENTIONS - INGENIA.ORG.UK The brain of the box is a Raspberry Pi 3 (‘Chips that changed the classroom’, Ingenia 72) which relays very close to real-time video to the screen – there are only a couple of hundred milliseconds of delay. There is also a battery backup system for the Raspberry Pi sothat it
ARTICLES - BUILDING THE SHARD - INGENIA SHARD CONCEPT. The Shard is an unusual mixture of concrete and steel, a tiered wedding cake of a building with a concrete basement, structural steel from ground to level 40, concrete from levels 41 to 69, and steel again from there to the top at level 95. ARTICLES - THE FUTURE OF GPS - INGENIA The improvement in the performance of GPS over the last decade has been phenomenal. Developed originally for the military in the 1970s, and owned and operated by the US Department of Defense, GPS gradually gained a foothold in sea and air navigation. More recently, with improved receivers and auxiliary technologies like map-matching, ithas
ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - BRINGING CLEANER SEAS TO SUSSEX The four-year construction project has brought in two dozen more awards that recognise the scale and success of the project. Peacehaven has brought cleaner seas to Sussex and has, on the way, learned and shared lessons on public engagement that could be used on future sensitive construction projects. ARTICLES - ALGAE-POWERED ARCHITECTURE The establishment of zero- or even surplus-energy buildings is a goal that has been set for sustainable architecture. An apartment block in Hamburg in Germany has been built that uses microalgae placed within its façade to generate heat and biomass. Jan Wurm, an associate director at Arup, was one of the chief designers of the energy system. ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of their ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
INGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - TAILOR-MADE INVENTIONS The brain of the box is a Raspberry Pi 3 (‘Chips that changed the classroom’, Ingenia 72) which relays very close to real-time video to the screen – there are only a couple of hundred milliseconds of delay. There is also a battery backup system for the Raspberry Pi sothat it
ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - HOW DOES THAT WORK - KETTLE SWITCH-OFF Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of their ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
INGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - TAILOR-MADE INVENTIONS The brain of the box is a Raspberry Pi 3 (‘Chips that changed the classroom’, Ingenia 72) which relays very close to real-time video to the screen – there are only a couple of hundred milliseconds of delay. There is also a battery backup system for the Raspberry Pi sothat it
ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - HOW DOES THAT WORK - KETTLE SWITCH-OFF Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story.CONTENTS
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - TAILOR-MADE INVENTIONS The brain of the box is a Raspberry Pi 3 (‘Chips that changed the classroom’, Ingenia 72) which relays very close to real-time video to the screen – there are only a couple of hundred milliseconds of delay. There is also a battery backup system for the Raspberry Pi sothat it
ARTICLES - BUILDING THE SHARD - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - HIVES OF ACTIVITY - INGENIA.ORG.UK Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - THE D154 PROJECT Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - THE FUTURE OF GPS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - BRINGING CLEANER SEAS TO SUSSEX Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - ENGINEERING THE SPACE BELOW TERMINAL 5 Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - WHY RAILS CRACK? - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
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Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of their ARTICLES - ENGINEERING ETHICS Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - THE FUTURE OF GPS - INGENIA The improvement in the performance of GPS over the last decade has been phenomenal. Developed originally for the military in the 1970s, and owned and operated by the US Department of Defense, GPS gradually gained a foothold in sea and air navigation. More recently, with improved receivers and auxiliary technologies like map-matching, ithas
ARTICLES - LESSONS FROM WINDSCALE'S NUCLEAR LEGACY In the longer term, the experience from Windscale will help in decommissioning new nuclear power stations. In general terms, this includes reassuring the UK public that the industry can manage the legacy issues surrounding nuclear power. Indeed, the WAGR decommissioning was a European demonstration project, managed by theOECD Nuclear Energy
ARTICLES - RAISING AND CONSERVING THE MARY ROSE RAISING THE MARY ROSE. The first step of the plan to lift the Mary Rose tackled the problem of ‘bottom suction’, whereby the ship was embedded within the silt and clay of the seabed. This was achieved using 12 hydraulic jacks raising a lifting frame slowly , over a period of several days, up its four legs. ARTICLES - ALGAE-POWERED ARCHITECTURE The establishment of zero- or even surplus-energy buildings is a goal that has been set for sustainable architecture. An apartment block in Hamburg in Germany has been built that uses microalgae placed within its façade to generate heat and biomass. Jan Wurm, an associate director at Arup, was one of the chief designers of the energy system. ARTICLES - ENGINEERING THE SPACE BELOW TERMINAL 5 Above ground, Heathrow’s Terminal 5 embraces design and architecture at its best while below ground it hides one of the most notable engineering achievements of its kind anywhere in the world. The three buildings that make up Terminal 5 have a combined floor area greater than all the other Heathrow terminals added together. ARTICLES - WHY RAILS CRACK? - INGENIA The Hatfield train crash in October 2000 brought ‘gauge corner cracking’ to the attention of the British railway industry and to the travelling public. An intercity train left the track because of a fracture in the high or outer rail of a 1,500 metre radius curve. What was unusual about the break was the apparent disintegration of therail
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIASELF HEALING CONCRETE PRICESELF HEALING CONCRETE COSTSELF HEALING CONCRETE PRODUCTSSELF HEALING CONCRETE MANUFACTURERSSELF HEALING CONCRETE RESEARCHSELF HEALING CONCRETE PDF Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIASELF HEALING CONCRETE PRICESELF HEALING CONCRETE COSTSELF HEALING CONCRETE PRODUCTSSELF HEALING CONCRETE MANUFACTURERSSELF HEALING CONCRETE RESEARCHSELF HEALING CONCRETE PDF Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of their ARTICLES - ENGINEERING ETHICS Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - THE FUTURE OF GPS - INGENIA The improvement in the performance of GPS over the last decade has been phenomenal. Developed originally for the military in the 1970s, and owned and operated by the US Department of Defense, GPS gradually gained a foothold in sea and air navigation. More recently, with improved receivers and auxiliary technologies like map-matching, ithas
ARTICLES - LESSONS FROM WINDSCALE'S NUCLEAR LEGACY In the longer term, the experience from Windscale will help in decommissioning new nuclear power stations. In general terms, this includes reassuring the UK public that the industry can manage the legacy issues surrounding nuclear power. Indeed, the WAGR decommissioning was a European demonstration project, managed by theOECD Nuclear Energy
ARTICLES - RAISING AND CONSERVING THE MARY ROSE RAISING THE MARY ROSE. The first step of the plan to lift the Mary Rose tackled the problem of ‘bottom suction’, whereby the ship was embedded within the silt and clay of the seabed. This was achieved using 12 hydraulic jacks raising a lifting frame slowly , over a period of several days, up its four legs. ARTICLES - ALGAE-POWERED ARCHITECTURE The establishment of zero- or even surplus-energy buildings is a goal that has been set for sustainable architecture. An apartment block in Hamburg in Germany has been built that uses microalgae placed within its façade to generate heat and biomass. Jan Wurm, an associate director at Arup, was one of the chief designers of the energy system. ARTICLES - ENGINEERING THE SPACE BELOW TERMINAL 5 Above ground, Heathrow’s Terminal 5 embraces design and architecture at its best while below ground it hides one of the most notable engineering achievements of its kind anywhere in the world. The three buildings that make up Terminal 5 have a combined floor area greater than all the other Heathrow terminals added together. ARTICLES - WHY RAILS CRACK? - INGENIA The Hatfield train crash in October 2000 brought ‘gauge corner cracking’ to the attention of the British railway industry and to the travelling public. An intercity train left the track because of a fracture in the high or outer rail of a 1,500 metre radius curve. What was unusual about the break was the apparent disintegration of therail
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIASELF HEALING CONCRETE PRICESELF HEALING CONCRETE COSTSELF HEALING CONCRETE PRODUCTSSELF HEALING CONCRETE MANUFACTURERSSELF HEALING CONCRETE RESEARCHSELF HEALING CONCRETE PDF Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIASELF HEALING CONCRETE PRICESELF HEALING CONCRETE COSTSELF HEALING CONCRETE PRODUCTSSELF HEALING CONCRETE MANUFACTURERSSELF HEALING CONCRETE RESEARCHSELF HEALING CONCRETE PDF Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of their ARTICLES - ENGINEERING ETHICS Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - THE FUTURE OF GPS - INGENIA The improvement in the performance of GPS over the last decade has been phenomenal. Developed originally for the military in the 1970s, and owned and operated by the US Department of Defense, GPS gradually gained a foothold in sea and air navigation. More recently, with improved receivers and auxiliary technologies like map-matching, ithas
ARTICLES - LESSONS FROM WINDSCALE'S NUCLEAR LEGACY In the longer term, the experience from Windscale will help in decommissioning new nuclear power stations. In general terms, this includes reassuring the UK public that the industry can manage the legacy issues surrounding nuclear power. Indeed, the WAGR decommissioning was a European demonstration project, managed by theOECD Nuclear Energy
ARTICLES - RAISING AND CONSERVING THE MARY ROSE RAISING THE MARY ROSE. The first step of the plan to lift the Mary Rose tackled the problem of ‘bottom suction’, whereby the ship was embedded within the silt and clay of the seabed. This was achieved using 12 hydraulic jacks raising a lifting frame slowly , over a period of several days, up its four legs. ARTICLES - ALGAE-POWERED ARCHITECTURE The establishment of zero- or even surplus-energy buildings is a goal that has been set for sustainable architecture. An apartment block in Hamburg in Germany has been built that uses microalgae placed within its façade to generate heat and biomass. Jan Wurm, an associate director at Arup, was one of the chief designers of the energy system. ARTICLES - ENGINEERING THE SPACE BELOW TERMINAL 5 Above ground, Heathrow’s Terminal 5 embraces design and architecture at its best while below ground it hides one of the most notable engineering achievements of its kind anywhere in the world. The three buildings that make up Terminal 5 have a combined floor area greater than all the other Heathrow terminals added together. ARTICLES - WHY RAILS CRACK? - INGENIA The Hatfield train crash in October 2000 brought ‘gauge corner cracking’ to the attention of the British railway industry and to the travelling public. An intercity train left the track because of a fracture in the high or outer rail of a 1,500 metre radius curve. What was unusual about the break was the apparent disintegration of therail
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIASELF HEALING CONCRETE PRICESELF HEALING CONCRETE COSTSELF HEALING CONCRETE PRODUCTSSELF HEALING CONCRETE MANUFACTURERSSELF HEALING CONCRETE RESEARCHSELF HEALING CONCRETE PDF Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - POWER FOR THE PEOPLE: STIRLING ENGINES FOR All use water cooling. These parameters should result in a Domestic CHP engine with an efficiency in the 15–25% range and, for a machine about the size of a small TV set, a power output somewhere in the region of 1–3 kW. The statement about efficiency levels may surprisesome readers.
ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIASELF HEALING CONCRETE PRICESELF HEALING CONCRETE COSTSELF HEALING CONCRETE PRODUCTSSELF HEALING CONCRETE MANUFACTURERSSELF HEALING CONCRETE RESEARCHSELF HEALING CONCRETE PDF Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of theirINGENIA
Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - AUTISM AND ENGINEERS - IS THERE A CONNECTION? The apparent link between engineering and autism, and more specifically Asperger’s Syndrome, is being studied by Professor Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University, UK. He says the ability to understand the laws of physics,maths, or engineering could be inherited. Where there are two generations of engineers ARTICLES - MARINE PROPULSION: THE TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY OF The start of the twenty-first century has brought a resurgence of interest in marine propulsion. Major navies world-wide are assessing and updating their fleets. The Internet offers international shopping to every household, fuelling demand for fast and economical freight transport. Travel is a stressful element of many people’s jobs, sothe
ARTICLES - THE AUTOMATION OF DAIRY FARMS - INGENIA Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - STABILISING THE LONDON MILLENNIUM BRIDGE The Millennium Bridge is conceived as a ‘minimal’ way of providing a connection between the two banks of the Thames. A group of cables either side of a deck span the river over two river piers to form a shallow suspension bridge. The rise from the lowest to the highest point of the cables is 2.3 m over the 144 m centre span. ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - BROMPTON FOLDING BIKES - INGENIA Brompton Bicycle Ltd is the largest-volume bicycle manufacturer in the UK, with a staff of 160 and a turnover of £16 million. Will Butler-Adams, the company’s managing director, explains how engineering innovation has turned its folding bicycle into a major UK manufacturing success story. Brompton bicycle inventor and companyfounder Andrew
HOME
Home. Ingenia publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering ARTICLES - SELF-HEALING CONCRETE - INGENIA Mineral-producing bacteria have been found that could help mend micro-cracking in concrete. Dr Henk Jonkers, a micro-biologist at Delft University, talked to Ingenia about research developments in producing bioconcrete that could bring benefits for civil engineering projects.. Self-healing concrete could solve the problem of concrete structures deteriorating well before the end of their ARTICLES - ENGINEERING ETHICS Ingenia magazine is aimed at all those with an interest in engineering, whether you work in business and industry, government, academia or the financial community. Complex or technical engineering issues are explained for the non-specialist and confusing jargon iskept to a minimum.
ARTICLES - FOUR ENGINEERS: FOUR SILVER MEDALS Four engineers: four silver medals. Download the article (109 KB) The Royal Academy of Engineering’s Silver Medals were presented to the winners at the Academy’s awards evening in July 2013. Since 1995, the medals have been awarded annually to engineers who have been working as an engineer for no more than 22 years and have madeoutstanding
ARTICLES - THE FUTURE OF GPS - INGENIA The improvement in the performance of GPS over the last decade has been phenomenal. Developed originally for the military in the 1970s, and owned and operated by the US Department of Defense, GPS gradually gained a foothold in sea and air navigation. More recently, with improved receivers and auxiliary technologies like map-matching, ithas
ARTICLES - LESSONS FROM WINDSCALE'S NUCLEAR LEGACY In the longer term, the experience from Windscale will help in decommissioning new nuclear power stations. In general terms, this includes reassuring the UK public that the industry can manage the legacy issues surrounding nuclear power. Indeed, the WAGR decommissioning was a European demonstration project, managed by theOECD Nuclear Energy
ARTICLES - RAISING AND CONSERVING THE MARY ROSE RAISING THE MARY ROSE. The first step of the plan to lift the Mary Rose tackled the problem of ‘bottom suction’, whereby the ship was embedded within the silt and clay of the seabed. This was achieved using 12 hydraulic jacks raising a lifting frame slowly , over a period of several days, up its four legs. ARTICLES - ALGAE-POWERED ARCHITECTURE The establishment of zero- or even surplus-energy buildings is a goal that has been set for sustainable architecture. An apartment block in Hamburg in Germany has been built that uses microalgae placed within its façade to generate heat and biomass. Jan Wurm, an associate director at Arup, was one of the chief designers of the energy system. ARTICLES - ENGINEERING THE SPACE BELOW TERMINAL 5 Above ground, Heathrow’s Terminal 5 embraces design and architecture at its best while below ground it hides one of the most notable engineering achievements of its kind anywhere in the world. The three buildings that make up Terminal 5 have a combined floor area greater than all the other Heathrow terminals added together. ARTICLES - WHY RAILS CRACK? - INGENIA The Hatfield train crash in October 2000 brought ‘gauge corner cracking’ to the attention of the British railway industry and to the travelling public. An intercity train left the track because of a fracture in the high or outer rail of a 1,500 metre radius curve. What was unusual about the break was the apparent disintegration of therail
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_Ingenia_ publishes stimulating and informative articles about all aspects of engineering and technology, from robotics and data to the latest in renewable energy and medical technologies. It produces authoritative yet accessible content, aimed at engineering enthusiasts from 10 to 110, a broad audience that includes students, engineering undergraduates, engineers at all levels, and academics. ISSUE 86, MARCH 2021 All hands to the pumps _Michael Kenward OBE _ Helping the green revolution _David Williams and Muhammad Imran Khan_ Life after landfills_Dominic Joyeux_
The Mayflower sails again_Neil Cumins_
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