Event Coordinator - Big Bowl, Tucci Bennuch, Don & Charlie's at Lettuce Entertain You
Location:
Greater Chicago Area
Industry:
Restaurants
Work:
Lettuce Entertain You - Chicago, Minneapolis, Scottsdale since Jan 2012
Event Coordinator - Big Bowl, Tucci Bennuch, Don & Charlie's
Lettuce Entertain You Jan 2009 - Dec 2011
Manager
J. Alexanders Corporation Jul 2007 - Nov 2008
Manager
Education:
Michigan State University 2003 - 2007
Bachelor, Hospitality Business
Skills:
Catering Private Party Decoration Food & Beverage Food Safety Menu Development
But according to Christina Dwyer, a graduate student in Earth and planetary sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz, such a dynamo could have existed in the past, created by the stirring of the moon's liquid core, driven by the motion of the solid mantle above.
Once the Moon receded far enough from Earth, about 48 Earth radii which would have happened 2.7 billion years ago, Christina Dwyer (University of California, Santa Cruz) and her colleagues predict in the paper the dynamo would have shut off from insufficient power.
Date: Nov 10, 2011
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Mysterious Moon Magnetism Could Be Result of Earth's Gravity
At first people said, What are you talking about? since this was completely unexpected, said planetary scientist Christina Dwyer of the University of California, Santa Cruz, who is the lead author of a paper in Nature Nov. 9 proposing a new way to create global magnetic fields.
In one new proposal, Christina Dwyer of the University of California, Santa Cruz, and her colleagues suggest that the moon's solid-rock middle layer, called its mantle, stirs up its liquid iron core. The researchers think this happens because the moon's core and its mantle rotate around sligh
Stirring it upIn one new proposal, Christina Dwyer of the University of California, Santa Cruz, and her colleagues suggest that the moon's solid-rock middle layer, called its mantle, stirs up its liquid iron core. The researchers think this happens because the moon's core and its mantle rotate
Date: Nov 09, 2011
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
UCSC researchers propose a new way the moon could have generated a magnetic field
"People have been scratching their heads for 40 years, ever since Apollo," said Christina Dwyer, a graduate student in planetary sciences at UCSC and lead author of the study. The moon's magnetic field must have formed a different way, Dwyer said.
Christina Dwyer 1986 graduate of Ridgefield Park High School in Ridgefield park, NJ is on Memory Lane. Get caught up with Christina and other high school alumni
Alex Velez, Kyra Abrahamsen, Mick Keelty, James Hoch, Matthew Jordan, Brian Costello, Blanca Castro, Joseph Farris, Joshua Lott, Jess Kruse, Jakob Triplett