Hughes and Six Students Highly Cited Researchers


Hughes and Six Students Highly Cited Researchers

Thomas J.R. Hughes, Professor of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics, and Computational and Applied Mathematics Chair III at the Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences (ICES), the University of Texas at Austin, and six of his former PhD students were identified as Highly Cited Researchers 2014 by Thompson Reuters for the period 2002 through 2012. Researchers earned the distinction by writing the greatest number of papers in the top 1% in their fields during the year of publication, “earning them the mark of exceptional impact.” Two of Dr. Hughes’s PhD students who earned the distinction, Wing Kam Liu and Tayfun Tezduyar, are among his earliest and the four others, Victor Calo, Alessandro Reali, Yuri Bazilevs, and Austin Cottrell, are among his most recent.

Wing Kam Liu was Hughes’s first PhD student at the California Institute of Technology, completing his PhD in Civil Engineering in 1980. Liu is the Walter P. Murphy Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Northwestern University. His research interests include theory and methodologies of simulation-driven science and engineering for design of nano-materials and the use of organic and inorganic materials for drug delivery and nano-medicine applications.

Tayfun Tezduyar, the James F. Barbour Professor in Mechanical Engineering at Rice University, received his PhD in Mechanical Engineering from the California Institute of Technology under Hughes’s supervision in 1982. Tezduyar’s research areas include computational fluid-structure interaction, spacecraft parachute modeling, cardiovascular mechanics, and flapping-wing aerodynamics.

Victor Calo, Associate Professor of Earth Sciences and Engineering at KAUST, the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, received his PhD in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Stanford University in 2005. Calo's research interests include computational and analytical aspects of isogeometric analysis, geomechanics, fluid dynamics, flow in porous media, phase separation, fluid-structure interaction, and solid mechanics, and high-performance and geometric computing.

Alessandro Reali is Associate Professor of Mechanics of Solids and Structures at the University of Pavia. Reali received his MS in 2004 and PhD in 2005 in Earthquake Engineering from the European School for Advanced Studies in Reduction of Seismic Risk (ROSE School) of the Institute for Advanced Study of Pavia (IUSS-Pavia) and the University of Pavia. Hughes was Reali’s MS advisor and PhD co-advisor at the ROSE School. Reali's research interests include isogeometric analysis, finite element methods, collocation methods, constitutive modeling, and computational biomechanics.

Yuri Bazilevs is Professor of Structural Engineering at the University of California at San Diego. Bazilevs received his PhD from the Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences (ICES) at the University of Texas at Austin in 2006. Bazilevs's research is in computational mechanics, isogeometric analysis and fluid-structure Interaction, with applications in renewable energy and biomechanics.

Austin Cottrell received his PhD in Computational and Applied Mathematics from ICES in 2007, where his research focus was isogeometric analysis. Since 2008 he has been with Citigroup developing relative-value trading models for equity options. He is currently based in London as Citi's Lead Quantitative Analyst for Systematic Trading in Europe.

 

Benefits of Membership

Active USACM members receive the following benefits:

  • Discounts for USACM congress registration fee
  • Registration discount for IACM congresses and most events sponsored by IACM 
  • Registration discount for all US thematic conferences and workshops
  • Newsletter
  • Membership spotlights on the USACM website
  • Voting privileges (electing USACM officers, EC members  and USACM awards) are reserved for regular members only as is the eligibility for the USACM awards.

 

 

Why USACM Membership

As one of a growing nationwide group of engineers and scientists involved in commercial or academic activities in Computational Mechanics (CM), you need up-to-date information and an active network of contacts. Membership in USACM can help you obtain information and provide forums for meeting new colleagues and friends.