New and Special Courses

Spring Semester 2009-2010

The courses whose descriptions appear here are either seminar courses, experimental courses, one-time offerings, or new courses recently added to the permanent offerings at the Naval Academy. Only courses that are a part of the regular offerings at the Naval Academy are listed in the Naval Academy Course Catalog.  Midshipmen intending to take any of these courses should be aware of how they will be credited in their majors. For information about this, consult with the department concerned or the listed instructor. Credits are listed next to the title as an ordered triple (R-L-C), where R is the number of weekly recitation-lecture hours, L is the number of weekly laboratory hours, and C is the number of credits.

Aerospace Engineering

EA486A Aerospace Thermal Systems (3-0-3). One of the significant design challenges for all aerospace vehicles is thermal protection of vital systems. Thermal management systems include electronics cooling of avionics in aircraft and spacecraft, protection of propulsion components from combustions gases and protection of hypersonic and space vehicles from the external environment. The course will initially emphasize heat transfer theory including modes of heat transfer, thermal management techniques and components as well as computational methods. Once necessary theoretical elements are introduced the course will emphasize projects relevant to the respective disciplines and student interest. Examples include spacecraft thermal control modeling using analytical and numerical techniques, nozzle cooling using passive and active techniques and avionics (spacecraft and aircraft) thermal management components such as heat pipes, loop and pumped fluid loops. Preq: EM319 and EA305/EA332.

EA486D Spacecraft Guidance, Navigation, and Control (3-0-3). This course introduces the students to basic estimation techniques. The course includes a review of attitude parameterizations and attitude kinematics/dynamics and sensor models, an overview of basic probability concepts, the development of estimation methods including Kalman Filters, and discussions of the relationship between estimation and control. Basic principles in position estimation will also be introduced. Preq: EA364.

EA486G Recent Advances in the Detection of Gravitational Radiation (3-0-3). Since 1917 it has been expected that there are gravitational waves. Though these are not possible in Newtonian gravitational theory, they are an essential part of most metric theories. Within the last decade several detector systems of different types have been designed and in many cases deployed, in the attempt at the first detection of these waves. Analogous to electromagnetic waves, gravitational waves are changes in spacetime that propagate at the speed of light. This course will cover the idea of such waves as well as the experiments that have been and are being done to find them, including updating of the most recent results. Prereq: SM212.

EA486L Advanced Wind Tunnel Techniques Laboratory (1-4-3). This will be a semester-long, team-based wind tunnel research effort similar to the final midshipman-conceived projects of EA303. The focus of this course is to pursue advanced experimental techniques in the context of an applied aerodynamics research project. Specific technical tasks may involve flowfield mapping using stereoscopic particle image velocimetry (PIV), near-infrared imaging of boundary layer transition lines, flow visualization techniques, statistical data processing techniques, digital image analysis, and uncertainty analysis. The scope of the research projects will be suitable for presentation at student research conferences. Prereq: EA303.


Electrical and Computer Engineering

EE486E Advanced Technology (3-0-3). This course explores the fundamental advances in science, engineering, and technology that underpin the equipment, operations, and tactics employed by the defense community. Topics to be explored include: advanced missiles, radar, sonar, lasers, optical communications, advanced materials and structures, alternate energy, and space satellites. A key component of the course is an integral seminar, featuring internal and external subject matter experts, which will introduce the student to the advances in science, technology, and applications in areas complementary to course core content. Preq: 3/c, 2/c, or 1/c standing.


EM486A Computational Fluid Mechanics (3-0-3). An introduction to computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and computational aerodynamics. Review of Navier-Stokes equations for incompressible and compressible flows. Includes use of commercial and locally generated CFD codes. Also offered as EA428. Prereq: 1/C Engineering major or approval of department chair.

EM486H Solar Engineering (3-0-3). An introduction to solar energy conversion and utilization. Topics covered include solar radiation, flat plate collectors, concentrating collectors, energy storage, active and passive solar heating, solar cooling, photovoltaic converters and wind energy. Prereq: 1/C Engineering major or approval of department chair.

EM486J Directed Energy: Naval Applications of Lasers (3-0-3). Directed Energy is a potential “game changer” of modern naval warfare that will dramatically increase U.S. capability while decreasing the risk of collateral damage. This course will provide students an introduction to the use and control of Directed Energy Systems. Topics covered include Propagation of Directed Energy, Atmospheric Effects and Modeling and Simulation of a Directed Energy Beam. In addition, an overview of the technology and analysis needed to understand and design the beam control systems that accomplish acquisition, tracking, and pointing will be discussed. Guest speakers who are experts in these fields will complement the lecture series. Prereq: SM212 and SP212.

EM486K Wind and Current Energy (3-0-3). This course will cover the basics of wind turbine technology including the design of wind turbines, analysis of wind regimes and wind energy conversion systems. Land-based and offshore turbines will be discussed as well as emerging turbine systems using water currents. The course will include an experimental project that will be tested in a wind or water tunnel. The economics and policies involved in implementing this type of renewable energy will also be studied. Prereq: 1/C Engineering major or approval of department chair.


Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering

EN486D Marine Aquaculture Engineering (2-2-3). This course covers the engineering and technological components of cultivating marine organisms (fish, mollusks, crustaceans, and aquatic plants) primarily for human consumption.  An international perspective is taken. Prereq: 1/C ENA or EOE major, or approval of department chair.
 
EN486M Propulsion and Ship Systems (3-0-3). The goal of this course is to enhance the students’ understanding of how selected shipboard machinery systems impact the ship design process and the resulting ship. The characteristics of common machinery and distributive systems will be discussed along with design integration. The selection of specific shipboard components, satisfying appropriate requirements and constraints, will be undertaken through a series of simple design and lab exercises. Prereq: 1/C Engineering Major or approval of department chair.


Weapons and Systems Engineering

ES486F Robotic Algorithms for the Real-world (1-4-3). This lab based course is a hands-on introduction to the algorithms and representations used by mobile robots to robustly navigate in unstructured (real-world) environments. Topics include localization using landmarks, map making, obstacle avoidance, and path planning. Using iRobot Creates with mounted laser range scanners, students will teach the robots how to solve mazes, construct maps, and safely avoid obstacles. 2/C participation is encouraged. Spring 2009-2010 Prereq: ES201 or SI283 or SI204; and SM316 or equivalent exposure to probability.


Language Studies

FA486A Arabic Political Discourse (3-0-3). This course will present an overview of the various Arab political movements in the 20th and 21st centuries: the Muslim Brotherhood founded by Hassan al-Banna in the early 20th century; the rise of Gamal abdel Nasser in 1954 and the Pan-Arabist discourse inspired by social reformism in the context of Socialism; the modern conception of Arab nationalism and its relationship with Islam (Michel Aflaq and the founding of the Party of Resurrection (al-ba’th al-Arabi) in 1940; the resurgence of Islamic fundamentalism beginning in the 1970s; the critical political thinking of modern Arab thinkers in the diaspora such as Edward Said, Elias Khoury, Adonis. Students will undertake guided research using sources in Arabic and English. Prereq: FA302.

FA486B Arabic Folk Literature and Culture (3-0-3). This course will sample the genres and styles of folk verbal art from across the Arab world, including texts in both FuSHa and dialect, poetry, song, shadow plays, oral saga, and 1001 Nights, imaginary tales, and religious anecdotes, maqaamaat, and saints’ lives. There will be an emphasis on exploring the cultural traditions, behaviors and moral attitudes presented in these texts, in addition to the honing of all linguistic skills in reading, writing, listening, and oral presentation and recitation. Prereq: FA202.
         
FA486E Palestinian Literature and Film (3-0-3). This course presents modern Arabic primary materials in English translation to make a rich Arabic cultural tradition available to a wider audience in the Academy community. It explores modern and contemporary Palestinian literature and film, examining experiences of Palestinians in their historical context. These works include poetry, novels, and films, examining Palestinian experiences before the establishment of Israel, and then those related to each of the stages of the wars and occupation, as well as refugee experiences in surrounding Arab lands, the literature of the larger Palestinian diaspora, and the literature and film art of Israeli Palestinians. Some of the major figures whose work will be included in this course are Ghasaan Kanafani, Mahmoud Darwish, Fedwa Touqan, Sahar Khalifah, Samih al-Qasim, Emile Habibi, Anton Shammas, and Edward Said. Several films by Palestinians will provide important content. This course counts as an Arabic major elective or as a humanities-social science or free elective credit for all other majors. Students who took Iraqi Literature and Film two years ago may repeat this course for credit. Prereq: HE112.

FL286 Language Contact and Conflict (3-0-3). This interdisciplinary course examines the process of language contact in the modern world, assessing the role language issues play in social, political, and military conflict. The course is divided into two parts. The first six weeks of the course is devoted to an introduction to the interrelationship of language and society and the dynamics of language contact. The second part of the course will focus on language policy and planning. Introduction to policy issues will be followed by case studies. Students will examine and critique how policy makers in specific regions have attempted to resolve language issues in multilingual states. Prereq: HE111.


English

HE360 Tolkien and Lewis (3-0-3). [LCDR Crane] This course offers a survey of the fiction, poetry, and literary theory/criticism from the early-twentieth-century British writers J.R.R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis, who, along with several other Oxford University academics and writers, formed a group called the Inklings in the 1930's and 40's. We will examine these works in the contexts of Tolkien's and Lewis's fields of expertise (medieval and renaissance literature), the mainstream modernist literature with which they were contemporary, and the political and cultural changes of the early-twentieth century. The course will also examine their popularity with many diverse readers, their rejection by many critics, their contribution to the fantasy and science fiction genres, and some of the recent film adaptations of their work. In addition, the course will cover the friendship between these two writers and how various facets of their works were influenced by that friendship and other members of the Inklings. Prereq: HE111 and HE112.

HE463 A Century of Irish Poetry (3-0-3). [Professor Cone] W.B. Yeats famously wrote that “We make out of the quarrel with others, rhetoric, but of the quarrel with ourselves, poetry.” Ironically, notes critic Patrick Crotty, much of Irish writing in this century can be seen as a “quarrel” with the “overbearing example of Yeats,” though this poetry also reaffirms the long shadow Yeats cast. This course will examine the rich range of Irish poetry in the 20th century, starting with Yeats, continuing with the post-war poets Austin Clarke, Patrick Kavanagh, and Louis MacNeice, and concluding with such contemporary poets as Seamus Heaney, Thomas Kinsella, Michael Longley, John Montague, Paul Muldoon, Ciaran Carson, Eavan Boland, Medbh McGuckian, Tom Paulin, Nuala Ni Dhomnaill, Paula Meehan, Vona Groarke, and Conor O’Callaghan. Given that writing and politics have been and still are closely and explicitly intertwined in Ireland, we will look not only at the literary and political responses to Ireland's history of British colonial rule, but also at the challenges to the politics of the Irish State articulated by contemporary writers. No prior knowledge of Irish history is expected, though readings on Irish history and society will be included in the assigned readings. Frequent close readings of poems, as well as consideration of the literary tradition established by these poets, will serve as an avenue into the historical contexts of Irish cultural life. Prereq: one 300-level English course and permission of the department chair.

HE467 Post-War American Drama (3-0-3). [Professor Shaffer] The end of the Second World War revolutionized the American theatre, bringing forth whole new generations of artists determined to capture American life in all its diversity on the stage, often by giving voice to previously overlooked groups of Americans. At the same time, American playwrights began to break out of the cage of realism to produce plays that were (and are) as boldly experimental as anything produced by the European avant garde in the twentieth century. This course will begin with three major voices of postwar realism: Eugene O’Neill, Arthur Miller, and Tennessee Williams. It will then trace the formal and demographic evolution of postwar American drama by examining works by playwrights such as Edward Albee, August Wilson, Tony Kushner, and Susan-Lori Parks. Prereq: one 300-level English course and permission of the department chair.

HE504 Honors Seminar: Hemingway in the Twenty-First Century (3-0-3). [Professor Nolan] The course will examine Hemingway’s major works and themes, his considerable literary talent (with special focus on his style—its roots and impact), and his position in modern American literature. Readings will of course, include the famous novels—The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls, The Old Man and the Sea—but students will also study the short stories, including newly discovered ones, nonfiction prose, and other works that comprise the Hemingway canon. In exploring the diversity of Hemingway’s art, students will move chronologically, tracing Hemingway's development, his changing themes, and his artistic response to social events. In addition, because it is important to understand Hemingway the man and the milieu in which he lived, students will also read around in the plethora of biographies (a few of the multi-volume) and will explore some cultural history. Selected criticism will, of course, provide a background for further literary analysis. Prereq: 1/C Honors English majors or by permission of the department chair; Coreq: HE522.

HE522 Honors Supplement II (1-0-1). [Professor Nolan] Focused study of a topic generated in HE504. Prereq: None; Coreq: HE504.


Leadership, Ethics and Law

NP286 Ethics in Everyday Life (3-0-3). [Dr. L. Lengbeyer] This course will inspire students to develop a habit of, and skill in, examining the ethical aspects of their everyday lives. You will have the opportunity to come up with your own theories, and to develop and articulate careful defenses of them. Counts for 200-level HUM/SS elective. Prereq: none.

NP486 Ethics of Emerging Military Technologies (3-0-3). [Dr. E.T. Barrett] This course will examine the potential ethical ramifications—positive and negative—of emerging military technologies. Topics to be explored include: normative traditions evaluating the use of force, including recent developments within just war theory; ethically-significant technological innovations of the past; the ethical ramifications of emerging military technologies such as non-lethal weapons, robotics, nanotechnology, neurological/cognitive science, genetics, and information/communications systems; and critical frameworks for evaluating the relationship between ethics and technology. Counts for upper level humanities-social science credit. Prereq: 1/c standing.

NL486 Change Management (3-0-3). [Dr. J.J. Wilson] The primary goal of “Change Management” is to explore the theories, practices, tools and techniques for managing change in any organizational environment. Students will develop a working knowledge and a set of skills that will assist future Navy officers to successfully implement change in a variety of military organizational environments. Students will learn and utilize the case study method to practice analytical and leadership skills such as: understanding the nature of planned change, contracting with the customer, diagnosing organizational groups and jobs, analyzing data and other relevant diagnostic information, and leading and managing both small and large change initiatives. Counts for upper level humanities-social science credit. Prereq: 1/C standing.

NL486A Combating Terrorism: Laws in an Asymmetrical Fight (3-0-3). [Capt Joshua Girton, USMC] This course will explore the origins, structure, and function of the spectrum of laws influencing terrorism and counterterrorist operations both domestically and abroad. Topics addressed will include a definitional understanding of terrorism and relevant case studies, justification for anticipatory self-defense, targeting criteria on the battlefield, detainees’ rights and criminal prosecution responses, permissible interrogation techniques, domestic, martial and national security law, and potential civil litigation responses to terrorism. Counts for upper level humanities-social science credit. Prereq: 1/C standing.


Computer Science and Information Technology

IT486A Computer Forensics (3-0-3). This course introduces the student to the field of digital forensics and focuses on current policy issues and applied technologies. Topics covered include: legal and regulatory issues, investigation techniques, data analysis methods, networks as a source of evidence, live memory analysis, and incident response procedures for the Windows and UNIX systems. Prereq: IC322 or EE464 or permission of Department Chair.

SI286A Fundamentals of Cyber Security (3-2-4). This is a hands-on lab course providing an introduction to the principles behind the use, function, and operation of computers,
networks and applications in a cyber warfare environment. Topics include basic computer programming, computer networking, database fundamentals, web development, information assurance, network security, defense against hackers and offensive cyber operations. This course prepares junior officers for a leading role in cyber security within the Fleet and Marine Corps. No prior knowledge of computer programming or networks is required. Prereq: None.

SI486H Cryptography and Network Security (2-2-3). This course provides an introduction to the theoretical and practical facets of cryptography and network security. Topics include symmetric transposition and substitution ciphers, Data Encryption Standard (DES), Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), Diffie-Hellman-Merkle key exchange, Rivest-Shamir-Adleman (RSA) algorithm for public key cryptography, key management, Public Key Infrastructure, digital signature, authentication and nonrepudiation, hashing and integrity. Applications to electronic mail, IP and web. Prereq: IC322 or EE464 or permission of Department Chair.


Mathematics

SM286 Differential Equations with Quantum Mechanics (4-0-4). This course is designed for chemistry majors and provides the mathematical tools and techniques to solve differential equations with examples drawn from quantum
mechanics. The student will be introduced to linear and simultaneous differential equations, solution by power series, partial differential equations, and Fourier series. Throughout the course solutions to classic problems in quantum mechanics such as particle-in-box, the harmonic oscillator, and the rigid rotor are explored. The course provides a thorough foundation in differential equations while preparing chemistry majors for subsequent courses in physical chemistry and quantum theory. The course may be taken to fulfill the SM212 math requirement. Preq: 3/C SCH major and SM221 or SM223.


Oceanography

SO482A - Historic shipwrecks: Science, History, and Engineering (1-0-1). Web-based course showing how history, science, and engineering can be used together to search for historic ship wrecks from the Age of Sail. John Paul Jones’ ship the Bonhomme Richard serves as the case study, but the course stresses general principles and concepts with broad applicability.  We will discuss ship construction and naval tactics of the era, and the historical record of the battle between Bonhomme Richard and Serapis. Those facts will be integrated to suggest how the wreck might look today. The course also introduces scientific models for the tides and ships drifting in the North Sea, as well as principles of geographical information systems, and the creation of map databases to display historic data and search results. We will consider engineering principles of sensor design and employment, and how such historic vessels might be recovered from the marine environment. Four evening guest lectures will complement the self-paced, web-based weekly lessons. Some students may be selected to participate on a spring-break trip to Europe to explore naval museums and historic ships. Prereq: None.


Physics

SP286 Introduction to Space Science (3-0-3). A survey of current issues and applications of space science to include: A brief history of spaceflight, principles of propulsion and orbits, the space environment, satellites, remote sensing, astronomy from space, the Space Shuttle and the Constellation Program, living and working in space, and the future of mankind's presence in space. Coreq: SP211.

SP482 Science of Music & Sound (1-0-1). This seminar will focus on the technical aspects of music and sound. Topics will start with a review of basic definitions of waves and oscillations, followed by an in-depth look at sound generation on strings and pipes. Modes of plates and volumes will be discussed as a prelude to putting all the elements together to form musical instruments. The relationship between a source, medium and detector responses will complete the picture as to what exactly is being heard when we perceive sound. A mathematical discussion about the nature of music and its relationship to harmonies will lead to a closing discussion about music theory. This course has a lab component which is held 7th period as it will involve making loud sounds. Prereq: none.

SP482A Energy Issues in the 21st Century (1-0-1). Fossil fuels are running out. What are we going to do about it? Students will consider potential solutions, make appropriate calculations, discuss their results in a weekly seminar, and write a report summarizing their findings. Prereq: SP212.

SP482B Geometrical Math Methods: Eigenstates via Pictures (1-0-1)
. The 2-level spin-1/2 system, the lowest dimension Hilbert space, has a simple three-dimensional geometrical representation which yields considerable insight into operators, transforms, eigenstates, and dynamics. We will draw parallels to standard vector concepts to develop physical intuition and introduce vector space notations. Prereq: 2/C standing in Physics, Math, or EE.

SP482D Intro to Mathematica 7 for Scientists and Techies (1-0-1). A workshop-based introduction to Mathematica 7, developing skills in syntax, plotting, symbolic manipulation, graphics, animated output, and programming. Hands-on projects will draw from examples motivated by student needs in other courses. Prereq: SP211.

SP486 Introduction to General Relativity (3-0-3). A working knowledge of General Relativity is introduced, including the tools and problem-solving techniques needed for competence and understanding of the literature. The student will thereby acquire a broader physics perspective. Prereq: SP333, SP342, and SP352.



Return to descriptions of all courses.