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Gdańsk Tech students’ racing car ends the season with success in the Formula Student competition

Student's bolid on the road
Although they took 14th place in the general classification, they can definitely boast of great results in dynamic competitions - Skid Pad (10th place) and the most difficult one - Endurance (9th). PGRacing Team summed up the Formula Student competition in Varano de' Melegari, Italy in 2021.

Formula Student races are competitions for engineering teams of universities from around the world. These teams build the car themselves and then compete with it in static and dynamic terms against other teams and their cars, with a total of 1,000 points to score. The team of Gdańsk University of Technology, associated with the "Mechanik" science club at the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Ship Technology, is called PGRacing Team and since its inception it can boast the fifth consecutive car of its own idea and design.

Prof. Katarzyna Zielonko-Jung becomes a member of the Climate Council

Prof. Katarzyna Zielonko-Jung
Katarzyna Zielonko-Jung, PhD, DSc, Eng. Arch. from the Faculty of Architecture was appointed to the Climate Council by the UN Global Compact Network Poland - an organization working for the environment, human rights, counteracting corruption and decent and legal work.  

UN Global Compact (UNGC) is an institution established by the Secretary General of the United Nations. The UNGCN Climate Council established within its structures is a newly appointed advisory and substantive body, providing expert opinions as part of programs conducted at UNGC Poland.

CyberRadar. An innovative device for fighting Covid-19, developed by the scientists of Gdańsk Tech and MUG

Prof. Krzysztof Narkiewicz, MUG,, lincesed nurse Wiesława Kucharska, MD Ph.D. Beata Graff and prof. Andrzej Czyżewski. Photo:  Bartosz Bańka/Gdańsk Tech
Scientists from Gdańsk University of Technology and the Medical University of Gdańsk developed a device that can increase the effectiveness of the fight against Covid-19 and the diagnosis of patients with respiratory and circulatory problems. CyberRadar is a touchless device enabling the medics to safely monitor the patients’ respiration. Two copies of the device have been produced so far.

– CyberRadar is a device of small dimensions that can be located in any place in a doctor’s office or near the patient’s bed - says Prof. Andrzej Czyżewski, the head of the Department of Multimedia Systems at Gdańsk University of Technology, who developed the innovative device together with his team. – The device has a microwave sensor concealed in a plastic cover and a sensitive camera detecting the position of eyes and arms of the patient, and “positioning” the chest.

Together we can do more - the first debate

the authorities of the city and universities
On Thursday, 4 November, we held the first of three debates at Gdańsk University of Technology, dedicated to the academic society, under the title “Why do we need the Fahrenheit Union of Universities?”, which was attended by the Union authorities: rectors of MUG, Gdańsk Tech and GU, as well as the director of the Union, Prof. Adriana Zaleska-Medynska. The guests invited to the event included i.a. Dariusz Drelich, the Governor of the Pomeranian province, Mieczysław Struk, the Marshal of the Pomeranian province, and Alan Aleksandrowicz, the Deputy Mayor of Gdańsk.

– This meeting shows that we want to cooperate and the debate shall help us answer the questions: where to and why? - said Prof. Krzysztof Wilde, Rector of Gdańsk University of Technology and Chairman of the Fahrenheit Union of Universities in his welcome speech. I am convinced of the values that join us and allow us to jointly change and shape the academic force of our region. Together we can do more: both in the sphere of values as well as in organizational terms.

He loves sailing, so ... he printed his own canoe. Project by Eng. Maciej Karnowski

kayak on the beach
He's a sailing fan, but didn't have room to store a large boat, so he decided to go for something smaller. As 3D printing is also his passion, so he printed ... a canoe in which he traverses the Motława River and the Martwa Wisła. Maciej Karnowski, a graduate of ocean engineering at the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Ship Technology has just defended his engineering thesis entitled "The use of 3D printing in kayak prototyping".  

The kayak was printed at home, it is 2.3 m long and 80 cm wide. Maciej Karnowski designed the boat in such a way that it could be transported by a small car.

 – I printed the canoe at home and it took me a total of 400 hours – the printer worked about six hours a day. It is much smaller than a standard boat of this type, which usually measures about three meters - noted the graduate.

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