CEE 256: Building Systems Design & Analysis (CEE 156)
HVAC, lighting, and envelope systems for commercial and institutional buildings, with a focus on energy efficient design. Knowledge and skills required in the development of low-energy buildings that provide high quality environment for occupants.
Terms: Win
| Units: 3-4
CEE 259B: Construction Problems
Group-selected problems in construction techniques, equipment, or management; preparation of oral and written reports. Guest specialists from the construction industry. See 299 for individual studies. Prerequisites: graduate standing in CEM program and consent of instructor.
Terms: Win
| Units: 1-3
| Repeatable
for credit
Instructors:
Fischer, M. (PI)
CEE 260C: Contaminant Hydrogeology and Reactive Transport (ESS 221)
Decades of industrial activity have released vast quantities of contaminants to groundwater, threatening water resources, ecosystems and human health. What processes control the fate and transport of contaminants in the subsurface? What remediation strategies are effective and what are the tradeoffs among them? How are these processes represented in models used for regulatory and decision-making purposes? This course will address these and related issues by focusing on the conceptual and quantitative treatment of advective-dispersive transport with reacting solutes, including modern methods of contaminant transport simulation. Some Matlab programming / program modification required. Prerequisite: Physical Hydrogeology
ESS 220 /
CEE 260A (Gorelick) or equivalent and college-level course work in chemistry.
Terms: Win
| Units: 3
CEE 260D: Remote Sensing of Hydrology (ESS 224)
This class discusses the methods available for remote sensing of the components of the terrestrial hydrologic cycle and how to use them. Topics include the hydrologic cycle, relevant sensor types and the electromagnetic spectrum, active/passive microwave remote sensing (snow, soil moisture, rainfall), thermal sensing of evapotranspiration, gravity and hyperspectral methods, as well as an introduction to orbits, calibration/validation approaches for remote sensing and other topics common to remote sensing efforts in hydrology. Required pre-requisite: programming experience. Please complete problem set 0 to ensure pre-requisite programming knowledge is sufficient for success in the course
Terms: Win
| Units: 3
Instructors:
Konings, A. (PI)
;
Robinett, T. (PI)
CEE 260G: Imaging with Incomplete Information (CME 262, GEOPHYS 260G)
Statistical and computational methods for inferring images from incomplete data. Bayesian inference methods are used to combine data and quantify uncertainty in the estimate. Fast linear algebra tools are used to solve problems with many pixels and many observations. Applications from several fields but mainly in earth sciences. Prerequisites: Linear algebra and probability theory.
Terms: Win
| Units: 3-4
Instructors:
Kitanidis, P. (PI)
;
Schreiner, E. (TA)
CEE 262B: Transport and Mixing in Surface Water Flows (OCEANS 262B)
Application of fluid mechanics to problems of pollutant transport and mixing in the water environment. Mathematical models of advection, diffusion, and dispersion. Application of theory to problems of transport and mixing in rivers, estuaries, and lakes and reservoirs. Recommended: 262A and
CME 102 (formerly
ENGR 155A), or equivalents.
Terms: Win
| Units: 3-4
Instructors:
Monismith, S. (PI)
;
Chang, S. (TA)
CEE 262D: Introduction to Physical Oceanography (CEE 162D, EARTHSYS 164, ESS 148, OCEANS 162D, OCEANS 262D)
An introduction to what causes the motions in the oceans. Topics include: the physical environment of the ocean; properties of sea water; atmosphere-ocean interactions; conservation of heat, salt, mass, and momentum, geostrophic flows, wind-driven circulation patterns; the Gulf Stream; equatorial dynamics and El Nino; and tides. By the end of the course, students will have physical intuition for why ocean currents look the way they do and a basic mathematical framework for quantifying the motions. Prerequisite:
PHYSICS 41
Terms: Win
| Units: 3
Instructors:
Davis, K. (PI)
;
Hallett, C. (PI)
CEE 262G: Sediment Transport Physics and Modeling (OCEANS 262G)
Mechanics of sediment transport in rivers, estuaries and coastal oceans, with an emphasis on understanding the fundamental flow physics and subsequent transport of the underlying sediment. Topics include sediment dynamics in steady- and wave-driven bottom boundary layers, incipient motion, bedform dynamics, suspended and bed-load transport, and cohesive sediment.
Terms: Win
| Units: 3-4
Instructors:
Fringer, O. (PI)
CEE 262I: Atmosphere, Ocean, and Climate Dynamics: the Ocean Circulation (CEE 162I, EARTHSYS 146B, ESS 246B)
Introduction to the physics governing the circulation of the atmosphere and ocean and their control on climate with emphasis on the large-scale ocean circulation. This course will give an overview of the structure and dynamics of the major ocean current systems that contribute to the meridional overturning circulation, the transport of heat, salt, and biogeochemical tracers, and the regulation of climate. Topics include the tropical ocean circulation, the wind-driven gyres and western boundary currents, the thermohaline circulation, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, water mass formation, atmosphere-ocean coupling, and climate variability. Prerequisites:
MATH 51 or
CME100; and
PHYSICS 41; and a course that introduces the equations of fluid motion (e.g.
ESS 246A,
ESS 148, or
CEE 101B).
Terms: Win
| Units: 3
Instructors:
Vanegas Ledesma, A. (PI)
;
Wilson, E. (PI)
CEE 263D: Air Pollution and Global Warming: History, Science, and Solutions (CEE 64)
Survey of Survey of air pollution and global warming and their renewable energy solutions. Topics: evolution of the Earth's atmosphere, history of discovery of chemicals in the air, bases and particles in urban smog, visibility, indoor air pollution, acid rain, stratospheric and Antarctic ozone loss, the historic climate record, causes and effects of global warming, impacts of energy systems on pollution and climate, renewable energy solutions to air pollution and global warming. UG Reqs: GER: DBNatSci
Terms: Win
| Units: 3
