Biographical Info
- In September 2005, I joined University of California Davis to get a Ph.D. degree in Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering. I worked on simulation of unsteady turbulent flows using Galerkin Finite Element and dynamic remeshing under the supervision of Roger Davis. After taking a couple of classes at the Department of Mathematics, I noticed their significant effect on my research and decided to get a Masters degree in Applied Math. In June 2007 I became a double major graduate student. I worked on solution of viscous flow problems using proper orthogonal decomposition (POD) and Galerkin projection under the supervision of Roland Freund. After three wonderful years in California, I graduated from UCDavis in June 2008.
- Since September 2008, I work as a post-doctoral researcher in the Department of Mechanical Engineering - Carnegie Mellon University. My main duties at CMU include conducting research in geometric modeling and mesh generation. The main task is to design, develop and implement a flexible software system for geometry-representation and mesh generation with a focus on early-design evaluations as well as supporting complex analysis for a range of physics application that include the development of computational engineering tool sets for aircraft, ships and antenna in naval research.
- Click here for my resume.
Coordinates
- Office: Computational Biomodeling Lab - Department of Mechanical Engineering - Carnegie Mellon University.
Research Interests
- Optimal Data Structures for mesh objects and CAD models
- Galerkin Finite Element Methods
- Reduced Order Modeling using POD and Galerkin Projection
- Solution of Linear systems using Krylov Subspace Methods (GMRES, PCG, TFQMR, ...)
- High-performance Parallel Programing.