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New: Division Grows by Twelve PDF / Table of Contents / Go to Bottom of this Article Our newest colleagues bring a host of novel research approaches and programs to campus. Find here short profiles of no less that eight new professors, three joint appointments, and our most recent Moore Scholar. President Jean-Lou Chameau has also joined the EAS faculty as Professor of Civil Engineering and Environmental Science and Engineering—while we haven’t caught him in the lab yet, he has been spotted recently with a shovel and a hard hat breaking ground! John O. Dabiri: Assistant Professor of Aeronautics and Bioengineering
Dabiri received BSE degree in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering from Princeton University (2001) and an MS degree in Aeronautics from Caltech in 2003 as a National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellow. He received a PhD in Bioengineering from Caltech in 2005 as a Betty and Gordon Moore Fellow. Chiara Daraio: Assistant Professor of Aeronautics and Applied Physics
Daraio received her Laurea degree (equivalent to a master's degree) in Mechanical Engineering from the Università di Ancona, Università Politecnica delle Marche, Ancona, Italy (2001). She received MS (2003) and PhD degrees (2006) in Materials Science and Engineering from the University of California, San Diego. She has been a guest researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, National Center for Electron Microscopy since 2003 and is a recipient of the gold Materials Research Society Graduate Student Award (2005). Chin-Lin Guo: Assistant Professor of Bioengineering and Applied Physics
Chin-Lin Guo received his MD in 1994 from the Medical School of the National Taiwan University in Taipei and an MS degree in Electrical Engineering in 1996 from the National Taiwan University. After earning a PhD in Physics (2001) from the University of California, San Diego as a Burroughs Wellcome graduate fellow, he visited the Molecular and Cell Biology Department at Harvard University from 2002 to 2006 as a Helen Hay Whitney postdoctoral fellow. Tracey C. Ho: Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Ho received SB and MEng degrees in electrical engineering (1999) and a PhD in electrical engineering and computer science (2004) from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She has done postdoctoral work at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Lucent's Bell Labs. Swaminathan Krishnan: Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering
Beverley J. McKeon: Assistant Professor of Aeronautics
McKeon received BA and MEng degrees from the University of Cambridge in 1996, before traveling to Princeton University on Fulbright and Guggenheim Scholarships. There she received an MA (1999) and a PhD (2003) in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. She returned to the U.K. as a postdoctoral research associate working in flow control in the Department of Aeronautics at Imperial College London, and subsequently as a Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellow, before joining Caltech. Sandra M. Troian: Professor of Applied Physics, Aeronautics, and Mechanical Engineering
Prior to joining Caltech, Troian was a Professor of Chemical Engineering at Princeton University, and an affiliated faculty member in the Departments of Physics, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, and Applied and Computational Mathematics. Troian received her BA in Physics from Harvard University in 1980,
a MS in Physics at Cornell University in 1984, and her PhD in Physics
from Cornell University Axel van de Walle: Assistant Professor of Materials Science
Before his arrival at Caltech, van de Walle was a Senior Research Associate at Northwestern University. He received his BEng from the École Polytechnique de Montréal (1995) and his PhD in Materials Science and Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2000). Joint Appointments John F. Brady: Chevron Professor of Chemical Engineering and Professor of Mechanical Engineering
Brady's research interests are in the mechanical and transport properties of two-phase materials, especially complex fluids such as biological liquids, colloid dispersions, suspensions, and porous media. His research takes a multilevel approach and combines elements of statistical and continuum mechanics to understand how macroscopic behavior emerges from microscale physics. He is particularly noted for the invention of the Stokesian Dynamics technique for simulating the behavior of particles dispersed in a viscous fluid under a wide range of conditions. Brady has been recognized for his work by many awards, including a Presidential Young Investigator Award, a Camille and Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award, the ASEE Curtis W. McGraw Research Award, and the Corrsin and Batchelor lectureships in fluid mechanics. He is a fellow of the American Physical Society and a member of the National Academy of Engineering. James P. Eisenstein: Frank J. Roshek Professor of Physics and Applied Physics
Eisenstein received an AB degree from Oberlin College in Physics and Mathematics in 1974, a PhD from the University of California, Berkeley in Physics in 1980, and was a member of the Technical Staff of AT&T Bell Laboratories from 1983 to 1996. He joined Caltech in 1996. Scott E. Fraser: Anna L. Rosen Professor of Biology and Professor of Bioengineering
Fraser has been active in the advanced training of interdisciplinary students and post-doctoral fellows, serving as the co-director of the Marine Biological Lab's Embryology Course (with Professor Marianne Bronner-Fraser) and the co-director of Caltech's Initiative in Computational Molecular Biology (with Professor Michael Roukes). Fraser is involved in many professional societies including the American Association for the Advancement of Science; the Society for Developmental Biology; the Society for Neuroscience; the Biophysical Society; the Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers; and the American Society for Cell Biology. He is editor of Developmental Biology, and serves on the editorial boards for NeuroImage, Molecular Imaging, and Development. He has earned several awards for teaching and mentoring, as well as the McKnight Scholar Award and the Marcus Singer Medal. He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and of the European Academy of Science. Recent awards include the R&D100 Prize and the NASA Space Act Prize for the invention of new microscope techniques. Fraser earned his BS with honors in Physics from Harvey Mudd College and his PhD (1979) in Biophysics with Distinction from Johns Hopkins University. Moore Distinguished Scholar Krishna V. Palem: Georgia Institute of Technology
Palem has played an active role in enabling a community of research in embedded and hybrid systems internationally through invited and keynote lectures, conference organization and participation as well as editorial contributions to journals. He serves on the editorial board of the ACM Transactions on Embedded Computing Systems. With Guang Gao, he started the Compilers, Architectures and Synthesis for Embedded Systems (CASES) workshop series in 1998. Since then, this workshop has blossomed into a thriving international conference sponsored by ACM SIGs. From 1986 to 1994, Palem was a member of the IBM T. J. Watson Research
Center. He was a Schonbrunn visiting professor at the Hebrew University
of Jerusalem, Israel, where he was recognized for excellence in teaching,
and has held visiting positions at the National University and Nanyang
Technological University of Singapore. He is a fellow of the ACM
and the IEEE. |
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