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Opening for an experienced Research Engineer at Baker Hughes

Baker Hughes has an opening for a Research Engineer in The Woodlands, Texas (USA) office as described below. Interested candidates are encouraged to review the posting and apply online on the Baker Hughes careers web site http://www.bakerhughes.com/careers.

Please review the work authorization statement in the posting. Please mention "iMechanica" in the application.

 

Opening at Baker Hughes: Computational Mechanics Research Engineer

Baker Hughes has an opening for a Computational Mechanics Research Engineer in The Woodlands, Texas (USA) office as described below. Please visit the Baker Hughes careers web site http://www.bakerhughes.com/careers for more details and for completing online application. 

Summer Internship Opportunity at Baker Hughes

Baker Hughes has an opportunity for summer internship in the area of drilling mechanics and dynamics at Woodlands Technology Center, The Woodlands, Texas. The position is open to candidates in MS or PhD program in Mechanical/Civil/Aerospace/Mining engineering, Materials Science or relevant disciplines at a US University 

Summer internship at Baker Hughes

Baker Hughes is world’s third largest oil and gas services company with reservoir consulting and products and services for drilling, formation evaluation, completion and production. Baker Hughes operates in over 90 countries serving independent, international and national oil companies. Our service network is organized into 23 Geomarkets operating in 9 regions and 2 hemispheres.  

Baker Hughes is an Equal Employment Affirmative Action Employer 

Research Engineer position at Baker Hughes

Baker Hughes has an opening for Research Engineer position at its Woodlands, TX office as described below. Please visit the Baker Hughes careers web site http://www.bakerhughes.com/careers for more information and for applying. 

whirling of shafts

Hello,

I am doing a literature search on this topic. Particularly, I am interested in existing devices and techniques that are used in academia and industry to 1) avoid shaft whirl in rotating machinery under perturbed loads (e.g. rotor systems), 2) to come out of whirling mode if shaft starts whirling, 3) other techniques related to stabilizing shafts in general to reduce the resulting vibrations.

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

 Thanks.

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