APS Division of Fluid Dynamics

55th Annual Meeting

Important Dates

Program

Schedule

Registration Information

Housing

Abstract Submission

Gallery of Fluid Motion
   Information
   Examples

Student Luncheon

Wyndham Anatole Hotel

Dallas, Texas

SMU

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Student Luncheon, Monday, November 25

****Free Event****

Students attending the 2002 Annual Meeting of the Division of Fluid Dynamics will have the opportunity to participate in a discussion with an expert on a topic of interest.  Each expert will host an informal discussion over a complimentary box lunch.  The luncheon will begin promptly at 12:30 on Monday, November 25.  Students may sign up for the luncheon at the conference registration desk.  The event is free, but each table/topic  is limited to 7 students on a first-come first-served basis.  The experts and topics are as follows:

Host

Topic

Professor Stanley A. Berger
Department of Mechanical Engineering and Bioengineering
University of California Berkeley
Berkeley, California

Bio-fluid dynamics

Professor C. F. Chen
Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering
University of Arizona
Tucson, Arizona

How to get NSF grants

Dr. Robert Ecke
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos, New Mexico

Research at DOE national labs

Professor Jerry Gollub
Department of Physics
Haverford College
Haverford, Pennsylvania

Careers at research-oriented liberal arts colleges

Professor G.M. “Bud” Homsy
Department of Mechanical and Environmental Engineering
University of California, Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara, California

Interfacial flows

Professor Fazle Hussain
Department of Mechanical Engineering
University of Houston
Houston, Texas

Structure of turbulence

Professor Javier Jimenez
University of Madrid
Ecole Polytechnique Paris, CTR Stanford

International cooperative research

Professor Ann R. Karagozian
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
University of California, Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California

Combustion and fluid mechanics

Professor Joe Katz
Department of Mechanical Engineering
The Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, Maryland

Flows with free surfaces

Professor W. C. Reynolds
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Stanford University
Stanford, California

What additional physics might improve Reynolds-averaged turbulence modeling?

Professor Howard Stone
Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Harvard University
Boston, Massachusetts

Fluid mechanics in chemical engineering

Professor Sandra Troian
Department of Chemical Engineering
Princeton University
Princeton, New Jersey

Microfluidics – new opportunities for research and engineering

 

Hosted by  

SMU and UT Austin