CFSACO to stay in Cornwall December 24, 2020 at 14 h 44 min Reading time: 1 min A CFSACO simulation room at the Nav Centre. Photo from Choose Cornwall.
CORNWALL, Ontario – The Canadian Department of National Defense (DND) has extended its lease with the Nav Centre in Cornwall until 2025.
The Nav Centre is currently the home of the DND’s Canadian Forces School of Aerospace Control Operations (CFSACO), and this lease extension means that Cornwall will continue to host this important service to Canada’s military.
CFSACO has been at the Nav Centre since the building was constructed in 1979.
“We are very pleased to be home to CFSACO and look forward to working with our military partners for many more years,” said Kim Coe-Turner, General Manager of the NAV CENTRE. “The NAV CENTRE is ideally suited to host this type of training activity.”
Mydecine Innovations Group Engages ethica CRO as Contract Research Organization Partner for Phase 2A PTSD Clinical Trials - Press Release digitaljournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from digitaljournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
New Ice Sensor Efficiently Detects Ice Build-Up on Aircraft, Wind Turbines
Written by AZoSensorsDec 18 2020
A new study by researchers from UBC Okanagan has transformed how aircraft and wind turbine operators deal with the risks associated with the build-up of ice.
School of Engineering Mohammad Zarifi has made significant improvements to the real-time sensors that monitor frost and ice build-up on airplanes and turbines. Image Credit: UBC Okanagan.
As part of a follow-up to a study published early this year, Assistant Professor Mohammad Zarifi and his colleagues at UBCO’s Okanagan MicroElectronics and Gigahertz Applications (OMEGA) Lab have extended the scope and functionality of their ice sensors.
To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog:
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), or drones, are transforming how businesses in a wide range of industries operate. Initially considered something exclusively for military purposes, the drone industry has branched out, developing a multitude of commercial applications, including in oil & gas, mining, agriculture, retail, delivery services and health care. Many companies are realizing the unlimited ways drones can be used, such as data acquisition, aerial photography, remote sensing, mapping and surveying, disaster risk management, environmental monitoring and logistics and operations.
Bennett Jones Canada-Israel Initiative partnered with Aviram Hazak, M&A partner of the prominent Israeli law firm Herzog, Fox and Neeman to host the latest Maple and Honey Forum
E-Mail
IMAGE: UBCO researcher Mohammad Zarifi has made significant improvements to the real-time sensors that monitor frost and ice build-up on airplanes and turbines. view more
Credit: UBCO
New UBC Okanagan research is changing the way aircraft and wind turbine operators are addressing the risks related to ice build-up.
In a follow-up study from one released previously this year, Assistant Professor Mohammad Zarifi and his team at UBCO s Okanagan MicroElectronics and Gigahertz Applications (OMEGA) Lab, have broadened the scope and functionality of their ice sensors. We received a great deal of interest from the aviation and renewable energy industries stemming from our initial findings which pushed us to expand the boundaries of the sensor s responsiveness and accuracy, explains Zarifi.