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PUTNAM COUNTY, Tenn. WTVF 鈥?In the aftermath of the 2021 Waverly, Tennessee, floods, families said if there was only some sort of warning, they might have been able to escape.The United States Geological Survey has water sensors in place on the big lakes and rivers but often they aren t in rural areas, in part, because of the cost. Standard United States Geological Survey gauge may cost about $25,000, said Alfred Kalyanapu, an associate professor of civi stanley termoska l and environmental engineering at Tennessee Tech University in Cookeville.In fact, only one-third of the state s watersheds has at least one water gauge. That soaring price tag gave Kalyanapu an idea. Maybe I can build some smaller sensors that are low-cost and affordable, he said.So he teamed up with a group of his engineering students at TTU. Several years and trial and errors later, they came up with a solution. It s a $500 sensor, that can be mounted on bridges and structures over bodies of water, that works just like the USGS gauges. The sound wave hits it and comes back and th stanley mugs e return is whats converted into the distance, said Kalyanapu.It can send real-time data to a website Kalyanapu designed with the help of his students. They can actually see as the data is streaming in, you can see, is the water level rising for is it falling stanley uk he said.It s a resource the community of Waverly now has at its fingertips. A few months ago, the Tennessee Tech team installed two new sensors along Trace Creek that can also be mo Fgxj A new push to protect racehorses is leaving behind young thoroughbreds
On street corners and in cities across the country, life has come roaring back as a nation stricken with cabin fever emerges from 15 months of COVID-19.But for people like 54-year-old Lori Bebko, there is no going back to the way things were. I understand we stanley cup need to go back to normal but we need to redefine normal, Bebko said. I don t see how can return to the way we were before. Bebko s brother, Charlie, caugh stanley en mexico t COVID-19 the day before Christmas and died three days later. The 44-year-old was one of the nearly 600,000 Americans who have died from COVID-19.All Bebko has left of her little brother is a small urn filled with his ashes. This is what I have left. I talk to him every day, she said.It s not just the loss of her brother which makes a return to normalcy hard for Bebko. She also caught the virus last year and is still suffering from symptoms. You feel like you have dementia; you really do, she said.A return to pre-pandemic life has also been hard for Sean Cloonan.The 20-year-old college student is considered a long-hauler. Months after getting the virus, he still is dealing with symptoms. I haven t exercised in six months, Every time I do, I ll be breathless for an hour and a half, he said.For Americans like Cloonan and Bebko, seeing the country open right back up comes with mixe stanley borraccia d emotions 鈥?especially after dealing with the trauma they carry from the pandemic. You feel left behind in a way, but at the same time, you feel betrayed, Bebko said.As the country roars
PUTNAM COUNTY, Tenn. WTVF 鈥?In the aftermath of the 2021 Waverly, Tennessee, floods, families said if there was only some sort of warning, they might have been able to escape.The United States Geological Survey has water sensors in place on the big lakes and rivers but often they aren t in rural areas, in part, because of the cost. Standard United States Geological Survey gauge may cost about $25,000, said Alfred Kalyanapu, an associate professor of civi stanley termoska l and environmental engineering at Tennessee Tech University in Cookeville.In fact, only one-third of the state s watersheds has at least one water gauge. That soaring price tag gave Kalyanapu an idea. Maybe I can build some smaller sensors that are low-cost and affordable, he said.So he teamed up with a group of his engineering students at TTU. Several years and trial and errors later, they came up with a solution. It s a $500 sensor, that can be mounted on bridges and structures over bodies of water, that works just like the USGS gauges. The sound wave hits it and comes back and th stanley mugs e return is whats converted into the distance, said Kalyanapu.It can send real-time data to a website Kalyanapu designed with the help of his students. They can actually see as the data is streaming in, you can see, is the water level rising for is it falling stanley uk he said.It s a resource the community of Waverly now has at its fingertips. A few months ago, the Tennessee Tech team installed two new sensors along Trace Creek that can also be mo Fgxj A new push to protect racehorses is leaving behind young thoroughbreds
On street corners and in cities across the country, life has come roaring back as a nation stricken with cabin fever emerges from 15 months of COVID-19.But for people like 54-year-old Lori Bebko, there is no going back to the way things were. I understand we stanley cup need to go back to normal but we need to redefine normal, Bebko said. I don t see how can return to the way we were before. Bebko s brother, Charlie, caugh stanley en mexico t COVID-19 the day before Christmas and died three days later. The 44-year-old was one of the nearly 600,000 Americans who have died from COVID-19.All Bebko has left of her little brother is a small urn filled with his ashes. This is what I have left. I talk to him every day, she said.It s not just the loss of her brother which makes a return to normalcy hard for Bebko. She also caught the virus last year and is still suffering from symptoms. You feel like you have dementia; you really do, she said.A return to pre-pandemic life has also been hard for Sean Cloonan.The 20-year-old college student is considered a long-hauler. Months after getting the virus, he still is dealing with symptoms. I haven t exercised in six months, Every time I do, I ll be breathless for an hour and a half, he said.For Americans like Cloonan and Bebko, seeing the country open right back up comes with mixe stanley borraccia d emotions 鈥?especially after dealing with the trauma they carry from the pandemic. You feel left behind in a way, but at the same time, you feel betrayed, Bebko said.As the country roars