LOS LUNAS â CASA Partners 4NM Kids and Presbyterian Health Services have teamed up this holiday season to make it one to remember for foster kids in Valencia County.Â
About 90 children around the county will not only receive Christmas presents this year, they will receive stockings filled with goodies â which Presbyterian provided.
âEspecially now, this year more than ever, we need to help each other out,â said Linda Griego, a volunteer coordinator with CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates) based in Los Lunas. âI think itâs more meaningful this year than getting a gift or stocking.â
Organizers from CASA Partners 4NM Kids and Presbyterian Health Services teamed up to give foster children in Valencia County presents this Christmas.Matthew Narvaiz | News-Bulletin photo
Los Alamos study hopes to characterize and optimize ventilator treatment for COVID-19
Scientists and Engineers use computer modeling and experimental fluid mechanics to understand how tiny aerosol particles, when pulsed into the lung, may break up disease-related mucus and improve gas exchange
DOE/Los Alamos National Laboratory
Mathematical visualization shows the velocity of air entering the lungs from a high-frequency pulsating ventilator. Los Alamos National Laboratory image.
LOS ALAMOS, N.M., December 21, 2020 Cross-disciplinary scientists and engineers at Los Alamos National Laboratory are working to learn how Intrapulmonary Percussive Ventilation (IPV) helps clear mucus from blocking the airways of the human lung, a common reaction to the Covid-19 virus.
Date Time
Los Alamos study hopes to characterize and optimize ventilator treatment for Covid-19
LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Dec. 21, 2020 Cross-disciplinary scientists and engineers at Los Alamos National Laboratory are working to learn how Intrapulmonary Percussive Ventilation (IPV) helps clear mucus from blocking the airways of the human lung, a common reaction to the Covid-19 virus.
Researchers, using some of the same modeling and experimental techniques from the Laboratory’s nuclear weapons mission, are working to discover the underlying science and engineering principles behind this process and have developed a preliminary machine learning algorithm that could someday assist pulmonary doctors in treating Covid-19 patients with IPV.
High school students from 33 schools will be competing for $5,000 in prize money from 18 employers in the second New Mexico Governors STEM Challenge. Hosted and organized by New Mexico State University, the Los Alamos National Labs Foundation, New Mexico Department of Public Education and New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions, this event will be entirely virtual Saturday, Dec. 12.
Ten-person student teams have submitted solutions to the NMSU formulated question, How can you combine New Mexicos natural resources with technology to address regional/global needs? Employer partners have provided judges who will rate the solutions based on quality, creativity, presentation, and how they match up with skills that employers need for future hires in their own industries. Selected teams will receive $500 per student in cash.
Second Annual New Mexico Governor’s STEM Challenge
NMDWS News:
ALBUQUERQUE High school students from 33 schools will be competing for $5,000 in prize money from 18 employers in the 2nd Annual New Mexico Governor’s STEM Challenge. Hosted and organized by New Mexico State University (NMSU), Los Alamos National Laboratory Foundation, New Mexico Public Education Department (PED), and New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions (NMDWS), this event will be entirely virtual Saturday, Dec. 12.
Ten-person student teams have submitted solutions to the NMSU formulated question, “How can you combine New Mexico’s natural resources with technology to address regional/global needs?” Employer partners have provided judges to rate the solutions based on quality, creativity, presentation, and how they match up with skills that employers need for future hires in their own industries. Selected teams will receive $500 per student in cash.