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Carnegie Mellon Silicon Valley

2002 establishments in CaliforniaAC with 0 elementsBuildings and structures in Mountain View, CaliforniaCarnegie Mellon UniversityEducational institutions established in 2002
Private universities and colleges in CaliforniaUniversities and colleges in Santa Clara County, California
Carnegie Mellon West Building 23 Front Entrance
Carnegie Mellon West Building 23 Front Entrance

Carnegie Mellon Silicon Valley is a degree-granting branch campus of Carnegie Mellon University located in the heart of Silicon Valley in Mountain View, California. It was established in 2002 at the NASA Ames Research Center in Moffett Field.It has affiliation in East Africa, where there campus is located in kigali Rwanda. The campus offers full-time and part-time professional Masters programs in Electrical And Computer Engineering, Software Engineering and Software Management, various bi-coastal (split-time between Pittsburgh and Silicon Valley) Masters programs in Information Technology, and a bi-coastal Ph.D. program in Electrical and Computer Engineering. One key differentiator between programs in the traditional Pittsburgh campus and the new Silicon Valley campus is a new focus on project-centered learning by doing approach to education.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Carnegie Mellon Silicon Valley (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Carnegie Mellon Silicon Valley
South Akron Road,

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Wikipedia: Carnegie Mellon Silicon ValleyContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.4104 ° E -122.0597 °
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Address

23

South Akron Road
94035
California, United States
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Carnegie Mellon West Building 23 Front Entrance
Carnegie Mellon West Building 23 Front Entrance
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Ames Research Center
Ames Research Center

The Ames Research Center (ARC), also known as NASA Ames, is a major NASA research center at Moffett Federal Airfield in California's Silicon Valley. It was founded in 1939 as the second National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) laboratory. That agency was dissolved and its assets and personnel transferred to the newly created National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) on October 1, 1958. NASA Ames is named in honor of Joseph Sweetman Ames, a physicist and one of the founding members of NACA. At last estimate NASA Ames has over US$3 billion in capital equipment, 2,300 research personnel and a US$860 million annual budget. Ames was founded to conduct wind-tunnel research on the aerodynamics of propeller-driven aircraft; however, its role has expanded to encompass spaceflight and information technology. Ames plays a role in many NASA missions. It provides leadership in astrobiology; small satellites; robotic lunar exploration; the search for habitable planets; supercomputing; intelligent/adaptive systems; advanced thermal protection; and airborne astronomy. Ames also develops tools for a safer, more efficient national airspace. The center's current director is Eugene Tu.The site is mission center for several key missions (Kepler, the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph) and a major contributor to the "new exploration focus" as a participant in the Orion crew exploration vehicle.