Seminar Series: Fall 2019

August 14, 2019 (Special Date)
Prof. William Anderson (The University of Texas at Dallas)
“Turbulent Wall Flows over Spanwise-Heterogeneous Surfaces: Non-Periodic Deviation from Reynolds-Averaged Flow Patterns”

August 27, 2019 (Special Date)
Prof. Takehiro Himeno (The University of Tokyo)
“Free-Surface Flows in Liquid Rocket Propulsion Systems”

August 30, 2019
Ms. Lisa Griffin (NASA Marshall Space Flight Center)
“Fluid Dynamics at Work at NASA MSFC – Applications to Space Exploration”

September 6, 2019
Prof. Ethan Vishniac (Johns Hopkins University)
“The Large Scale Dynamo Problem”

September 13, 2019
Prof. Stefan Heinz (University of Wyoming)
“Towards Physically Exact RANS-LES”

September 20, 2019
Prof. Meng Xia (University of Maryland Eastern Shore)
“Wave-Current-Surge Modeling System for a Shallow Lagoon-Inlet-Coastal System”

September 27, 2019
Prof. Pete J. Diamessis (Cornell University)
“Self-Sustained Instability, Transition and Turbulence in the Separating Boundary Layer under an Internal Solitary Wave of Depression”

October 4, 2019
Prof. Mark Robbins (Johns Hopkins University)
“Fluid Flow Far From Equilibrium: From Shear Thinning to the Glass Transition”

October 11, 2019
Prof. Nigel Goldenfeld (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
“Fluctuations, Dissipation and Transitional Phenomena in Turbulent Pipe Flow”

October 18, 2019
FALL BREAK (No Seminar)

October 25, 2019
Prof. Arash Kheradvar (University of California-Irvine)
“Emerging Trends in Heart Valve Engineering and its Translation to Clinical Medicine”

November 1, 2019
Prof. Ali Mani (Stanford University)
“A Computational “Rheometer” for Turbulent Flows”

November 8, 2019
Prof. Marcus Herrmann (Arizona State University)
“On Large Eddy Simulations of Atomization”

November 15, 2019
Dr. Nathanaël Machicoane (University of Washington)
“Multiscale Characterization and Feedback Control of Atomization in a Two-fluid Spray Atomizer”

November 29, 2019
THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY (No Seminar)

December 6, 2019
(No Seminar)

Center for Environmental and Applied Fluid Mechanics