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Applied Mathematician Donald Schwendeman Named Head of Mathematical Sciences Department at Rensselaer
Professor
Donald Schwendeman has been named the new head of the
Department of Mathematical Sciences at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute. Schwendeman's expertise lies in the general field of
computational science and engineering where he has made
contributions in diverse topics such as combustion and reactive
flow, optimizing transonic and hypersonic wings, fabrication of
integrated circuits, and the stability of imploding shock
waves. He is also a longtime champion of the Mathematical
Problems in Industry Workshop (MPI), an annual event in which
faculty and students in applied mathematics tackle real-world
problems posed by industry partners.
“Don has a great history of important research and
positioning our students for success, and he’ll be a natural as
the next head of this important department,” said Laurie Leshin,
dean of the School of
Science. “He has all the skills and commitment needed to
take the Department of Mathematical Sciences to the next level
of achievement.”
The Rensselaer Department
of Mathematical Sciences is renowned for its strong faculty
orientation toward applied mathematics. The department is
considered one of the nation’s 20 best graduate programs in
applied mathematics, as ranked by U.S. News & World
Report.
“Everyone knows mathematics from their childhood, but many
people may not realize the value of math in real-world
applications. The techniques developed and the solutions
supplied by applied mathematics support everything from medical
applications such as ultrasound imaging, to microelectronics,
to homeland security,” Schwendeman said. “Rensselaer has a
strong tradition of applied mathematics and we are fortunate to
have a legacy of world-class research. It is exciting and
humbling to be chosen to lead the department.”
The department is one of the few in the country with a focus
in applied mathematics, particularly within the areas of
inverse problems, modeling and large-scale computations,
operations research and data science, and stochastic and
complex systems. Distinguished faculty within the department
have received numerous awards, including NSF CAREER awards, and
Guggenheim, Sloan, and Fulbright fellowships. The department
confers B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees, with enrollment
currently at about 130 undergraduate and 60 graduate
students.
Schwendeman’s own research is in applied and computational
mathematics, with a particular emphasis on models of detonation
in reactive flow. Schwendeman works with a team, including
researchers at Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos National
Laboratories, to study mathematical models that describe the
initiation, propagation, and possible failure of detonation
waves in condensed-phase (solid) explosives.
Schwendeman’s principal contribution in this effort has been in
the development and implementation of adaptive and parallel
numerical methods to obtain well-resolved solutions of the
models to help uncover the complex behavior of these reactive
materials.
“There are a lot of issues: what does it take to
initiate a detonation wave? Once the detonation is created, how does
it propagate? How does the detonation respond to changes in the
geometry of the explosive and its confining material? Can the
detonation fail?” said Schwendeman. “All of these questions
have important implications in applications from demolition and
construction, mining applications, handling old stockpiles of
explosives, and military applications.”
Since 1993, he has also been instrumental in the MPI
Workshop–an annual meeting founded at Rensselaer in 1985, and
since expanded to include several participating universities.
Through the workshop, students and faculty have put the power
of applied mathematics to work solving real-world problems
identified by industry partners, including Corning, GE Global
Research, Standard & Poor’s, Gore, and Pall Corporation.
MPI is part of a worldwide network of workshops that link
scientists and engineers from industry with applied
mathematicians from universities and national laboratories.
In 2004, Schwendeman created the Graduate Student
Mathematical Modeling Camp, a four-day training session that
provides graduate students with problem-solving experience
prior to attending the MPI Workshop. Over 250 students
from universities in the U.S., U.K. and Canada have
participated in the program, which receives support from the
NSF, as well as from Rensselaer.
Schwendeman joined Rensselaer in 1987 as an assistant
professor. He received his Ph.D. in applied mathematics from
the California Institute of Technology and B.S.E in aerospace
engineering from the University of Michigan. Schwendeman is a
longtime member of the Society for Industrial and Applied
Mathematics, has authored numerous articles in well-respected
journals, and was the recipient of a NSF Presidential Young
Investigator Award.
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Published
January 24,
2013 |
Contact: Mary L. Martialay
Phone: (518) 276-2146
E-mail: martim12@rpi.edu |
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