Momentum - The Magazine for Virginia Tech Mechanical Engineering Vol. 2 No. 4 Winter 2017 | Page 21

sand on jet engines. The Purdue University student presenting his research alongside them was studying what sand ingestion does to a jet engine from a materials perspective. “That was a little different: I’m looking at, ‘will the engine survive?’ He’s looking at, ‘well, what is it doing on a very small microscopic level?’” Boulanger said. sion Lab in Blacksburg and hanging a Trent 1000 engine in Goodwin Hall. “To get to see the professor and students and to collaborate — it’s a great feeling,” Krok said. “It’s a good place to be.” Christina DiMarino, a Virginia Tech doctoral student in electrical engineering who also attended Ph.D. Day, knows the importance of these interactions. A frequent traveler, the former Rolls-Royce fellow attends several conferences a year for her work at the Center for Power Electronics Systems. She has also conducted research abroad at the University of Nottingham through the College of Engineering’s International Research Experience for Students. DiMarino largely credits travel with connecting her to future collaborators and improved final research products. “It’s opened up a lot of doors for me,” DiMari- no said. The feeling is equally as rewarding for Rolls- Royce, whose contributions to Virginia Tech include establishing an Advanced Power Propul- Virginia Tech students Tamara Guimarães Bucalo, a Ph.D. candidate in mechanical engineering, and Vy Nguyen, a master's candidate in mechanical engineering, listen to other researchers present their work on different research focuses related to jet en- gines. Bucalo and Nguyen contribute to the advanced systems diagnostics research focus area. MOMENTUM WINTER'17 PAGE 21