I-3



Appendix I-3.

Aerospace Faculty Curriculum Vitae

1. Shaaban A. Abdallah

2. Professor of Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

Ph.D. (4.0/4) Aerospace Engineering University of Cincinnati 1980

M.S (3.93/4) Aerospace Engineering University of Cincinnati 1976

B.S. (3.5/4) Applied Mathematics Cairo University, Egypt 1973

B.S. (3.8/4) Aerospace Engineering Cairo University, Egypt 1970

4. Professional Experience

University of Cincinnati (15 years):

1993 - Present Professor, AsE & EM

1989 – 1992 Associate Professor, AsE & EM

1976 – 1980 Graduate Research Assistant, AsE & EM Dept

Penn State University:

1986 – 1988 Associate Professor of Aerospace Engg. & Sr. Research Associate

1981 – 1985 Assistant Professor of Aerospace Engg. & Research Associate

Cairo University, Egypt:

1970 – 1975 Teaching Assistant, College of Engg.

5. Related Experience

2/2000-2/2001 General Electric Co.

6. Consulting, 1998-present

2003 Naval Research Laboratory, Washington DC

2002 Ethicon Endosurgery

2001 University of Cincinnati Committee on Bjork-Shiley Convexo-Concave Heart Valve Research Project

2000. Noesis, Inc., Washington, DC

General Electric

Patents: Fluid Flow Controller, submitted February 23, 2001 – pending

7. Registration: none

8. Principal publications, 1998 – present

• Genaidy A, Abdallah S, Shell R, Khalil A, Tuncel S, Karwowski W, Cronin S, & Yeung S, “Work Compatibility: An Integrated Diagnostic Tool For Evaluating Human Performance in Emerging Enterprises,” submitted J. of Ergonomics 2004.

• Abdallah S, Genaidy A, Salem O, Karwowski W, & Shell R, “The Concept of Work Compatibility: An Integrated Design Criterion for Improving Workplace Human Performance in Manufacturing Systems,” Int. J. of Human Factors and Ergonomics in Manufacturing, Vol. 14 (4), 2004.

• Poondru S & Abdallah S, “Direct Matrix Inversion in Symbolic Form for Solutions of the Transport Equation,” 41st Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit, Reno, NV, Jan 2003; submitted to AIAA Journal

• Poondru S & Abdallah S, Direct Matrix Inversion Method for the Heat Equation,” presented at AIAA Central Regional Student Conference, Cincinnati, OH, Apr 2002

• Poondru S & Abdallah S, “Direct Matrix Inversion Method for the Steady State Laplace Equation,” AIAA Science and Technology Symposium, Dayton, OH, Mar 2002

• Ghizawi N & Abdallah S, “Parallel Processing Schemes for the Navier-Stokes Equations, Part 1: Scheme Development,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 36, No. 11, p. 2013, November 1998.

• Ghizawi N & Abdallah S, “Parallel Processing Schemes for the Navier-Stokes Equations, Part 2: Parallel Implementation,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 36, No. 11, p. 2020, November 1998.

9. Scientific and professional societies

1979 – present Member, AIAA

1985 – present Member, IMACS; Member, ASME Turbomachinery Committee

1988 – present Member, American Academy of Mechanics

10. Honors and awards: none

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003

02A 20 EGFD 741 VISCOUS LAM FLOW

02A 20 ENFD 101 MECHANICS I

03W 20 AEEM 110 INTRO AIRCRAFT ENG

03W 20 AEEM 474 AIRBREATHING PROPUL

03W 20 ENFD 101 MECHANICS I

03S 20 AEEM 474 AIRBREATHING PROPUL

03S 20 ENFD 101 MECHANICS I

12. Other duties:

1990–present Member, ASE & EM Low Speed Wind Tunnel Committee

Member, Engineering Service, Safety and Security Committee

1992-present Member, Academic Leave Committee

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement: None

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: None

1. Jandro L. Abot

2. Assistant Professor of Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

PhD Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 2000

MS Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 1998

CE Structural Engineering, University of the Republic, Montevideo, Uruguay 1993

Professional Experience

University of Cincinnati (1 year):

2003-Present Assistant Professor, AsE & EM

Northwestern University

Jan. 2001-Jul. 2003 Research Associate

Sep. 1996-Dec. 2000 Research Assistant / Teaching Assistant

University of the Republic, Montevideo, Uruguay

Jan. 1993-May 1996 Research Assistant / Teaching Assistant

4. Related Experience: none

5. Consulting, 1998-present: none

Patents: none

6. Registration: none

7. Principal publications, 1998 – present:

• Abot JL, Yasmin A & Daniel IM (2004), “Hygroscopic behavior of woven fabric carbon/epoxy composites. J. of Reinforced Plastics & Composites (in press).

• Abot JL & Daniel IM (2004), “Through-thickness mechanical characterization of woven fabric composites,” J. of Composite Materials (in press).

• Abot JL, Yasmin A, Jacobsen AJ & Daniel IM (2004), “In-plane mechanical, viscoelastic & thermal properties of a satin fabric carbon/epoxy composite,” J. Composites Science & Technology 64(2): 263-8.

• Yasmin A, Abot JL & Daniel IM (2003), “Processing & characterization of clay/epoxy nanocomposites by shear mixing,” Scripta Materialia 49(1): 81-86.

• Yasmin A, Luo JJ, Abot JL & Daniel IM (2003), “Mechanical behavior of epoxy based nanoclay composites at room & elevated temperatures. 18th American Society for Composites Conference.

• Abot JL. & Daniel IM (2003), “Composite sandwich beams under low velocity impact,” 14th Int’l Conference on Composite Materials, San Diego, California..

• Yasmin A, Abot JL & Daniel IM (2003), “Characterization of structure & mechanical behavior of clay/epoxy nanocomposites,” 14th Int’l Conference on Composite Materials, San Diego, California.

• Abot JL. & Daniel IM (2003), “Failure modes in glass/vinylester-balsa wood sandwich beams. 6th Int’l Conference on Sandwich Structures, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

• Daniel IM, Gdoutos EE, Abot JL. & Wang, K. A. (2002), “Deformation & failure of composite sandwich beams,” J. Thermoplastic Composites 16(4): 345-364.

• Abot JL, Daniel IM & Gdoutos EE (2002), “Contact law for composite-foam sandwich beams,” J. Sandwich Structures & Materials 4(2): 157-173.

• Daniel IM, Gdoutos EE, Wang KA & Abot JL (2002), “Failure modes of composite sandwich beams,” Int’l J. Damage Mechanics 11(4): 309-334.

• Abot JL, Yasmin A. & Daniel IM (2002), “Mechanical & thermoviscoelastic properties of clay/epoxy nanocomposites,” Proc. Materials Research Society Symposium 740: 167-172.

• Yasmin A, Abot JL, & Daniel IM (2002), “Compounding of nanoclay/epoxy composites with a three-roll mill,” Proc. Materials Research Society Symposium 740: 75-80.

• Abot JL, Yasmin A & Daniel IM (2002), “Mechanical & thermoviscoelastic properties of clay/epoxy nanocomposites,” Proc. Materials Research Society Symposium 740: 167-172.

• Abot JL & Daniel IM (2002), “Measurement of through-the-thickness mechanical properties of woven fabric composites,” 17th Conference, American Society for Composites.

• Gdoutos EE & Abot JL (2002), “Indentation of a PVC cellular foam,” 14th US National Congress of Theoretical & Applied Mechanics, Blacksburg, VA.

• Gdoutos EE, Daniel IM, Wang KA & Abot JL (2001), “Nonlinear behavior of composite sandwich beams in three-point bending,” Experimental Mechanics 41(2): 182-189.

• Abot JL, Yasmin A & Daniel IM (2001), “Impact behavior of sandwich beams with various composite facesheets & balsa wood core,” American Society of Experimental Mechanics, New York, NY.

• Daniel IM, Gdoutos EE, Abot JL & Wang KA (2001), “Core failure modes in composite sandwich beams,” American Society of Experimental Mechanics, New York, NY.

• Daniel IM, Gdoutos EE, Abot JL & Wang KA (2001), “Effect of loading conditions on deformation & failure of composite sandwich structures,” 9th Int’l Congress on Experimental Mechanics, ASEM.

• Abot JL & Daniel IM (2001), “Composite sandwich beams under low-velocity impact,” AIAA/ASME/ASCE/AHS/ASC Structures, Structural Dynamics & Materials Conf. 1: 67-77.

• Gdoutos EE, Daniel IM, Wang KA & Abot JL (2001), “Nonlinear behavior of composite sandwich beams in three-point bending,” 9th Int’l Congress on Experimental Mechanics, SEM, Orlando, FL.

• Daniel IM & Abot JL (2000), “Fabrication, testing & analysis of composite sandwich beams,” J. Composites Science & Technology 60(12-13): 2455-2463.

• Daniel IM, Gdoutos EE, Wang KA & Abot JL (2000), “Failure modes of composite sandwich beams,” 20th Int’l Congress of Theoretical & Applied Mechanics, Chicago, IL.

8. Scientific and professional societies:

American Society for Composites

Materials Research Society

American Academy of Mechanics

9. Honors and awards:

American Society for Composites, Best Paper Award, 2002

Who’s Who in America, 2001-2002

Walter Murphy Fellowship Award, 1999, 2000

10. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003: none (Elasticity II, Winter 04; Elasticity I, Fall 03)

11. Other duties:

75th Anniversary Planning Committee

Curriculum Sub-committee, Solids & Structures

12. Specific programs for faculty improvement: None

13. Special duties of co-op faculty: None

1. Peter J. Disimile

2. Associate Professor of Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

PhD, Mechanical Engineering Michigan State University 1984

MS, Mechanical Engineering SUNY - Stony Brook 1978

BS, Engineering Science SUNY - Stony Brook 1975

4. Professional Experience

University of Cincinnati (19 years):

1990- present Associate Professor, AsE & EM

1984 - 1990 Assistant Professor, AsE & EM

5. Related experience:

1999-present Staff Scientist, USAF Aerospace Survivability and Safety Flight, WPAFB

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

Provide technical services for litigation issues related to product failure and patent infringement

7. States in which registered: None

8. Principal publications, 1998 - present:

• Disimile PJ, Fox CW & Lee P, “An Experimental Investigation into the Airflow Characteristics of Laser Drilled Holes” Journal of Laser Applications, Vol. 10, No. 2, April 1998, pp. 78-84.

• Disimile PJ & Orkwis PD, “Sound-Pressure-Level Variations in a Supersonic Rectangular Cavity at Yaw”, AIAA Journal of Propulsion and Power, Vol.14, No.3: May-June, 1998, pp. 392-398.

• Disimile PJ, Toy N & Savory E, “Pressure Oscillations in a Subsonic Cavity at Yaw", Journal of the AIAA, Vol.36, No.7, July 1998, pp 1141-1148.

• Toy N, Disimile PJ & Savory E, “Local Shear Stress Measurements within a Rectangular Yawed Cavity Using Liquid Crystals” Optical Diagnostics in Engineering, Vol.3, Part 1, Spring 1999, pp91 – 101; (on-line) /Contents/ODE5.HTM.

• Disimile PJ, Toy N & Savory E, “Effect of Planform Aspect Ratio on Flow Oscillations in Rectangular Cavities” Transaction of the ASME, Journal of Fluids Engineering, Vol. 122, March 2000, pp32-38.

• Toy N, Savory E & Disimile PJ, “Liquid Crystal Visualization of the Vortex Flow Field within a Rectangular Yawed Cavity at Mach 2", Int Journal of Flow Visualization and Image Processing, (2001) Vol 7, no. 3, pp, 269 - 279.

• Disimile PJ, Toy N & Savory E, “Liquid Crystal Shear Flow Measurement within a Yawed Cavity @ Mach 2" 8th International Symposium on Flow Visualization, Sorrento, Italy, September 1- 4 1998, pp. 133.1 - 133.10.

• Toy N, Disimile PJ & Savory E, “Liquid Crystal Visualization of the Vortex Flow Field within a Rectangular Yawed Cavity at Mach 2" The 2nd Pacific Symposium on Flow Visualization and Image Processing 1999, PSFVIP-2, Honolulu, Hawaii, 16 to 19th May 1999, PF028.

• Toy N, Disimile PJ & Savory E, “The flow regime in 3-D rectangular cavities within a supersonic boundary layer using Liquid Crystals” 9th International Symposium on Flow Visualization, pp. 300-1 to 300-10, Edinburgh, Scotland, August 2000.

• Czech M, Savory E, Toy N, & Disimile PJ., “Aerodynamic phenomena associated with yawed rectangular cavities” AIAA 18th Applied Aerodynamics Conference, AIAA 2000-3927, Denver, CO, Aug 14-17, 2000, Collection of Technical Papers, Vol.1 (A00-39837 10-02).

• DesJardin PE, Nelsen JM, Gritzo LA, Lopez, A.R., Suo-Anttila JM, Keyser DA, Ghee TA, Disimile PJ & Tucker JR, “Toward Subgrid Scale Modeling of Suppressant Flow in Engine Nacelle Clutter”, Halon Options Technical Working Conference, Proc. HOTWC, Albuquerque, NM, 2-4 May 2001, pp. 99-110.

• Black AR, Suo-Anttila JM, Disimile PJ, & Tucker JR, “Numerical Predictions and Experimental Results of Air Flow in a Smooth Quarter-Scale Nacelle,”,Joint Sandia National Laboratories and 46th Test Wing Air Force Report, Sandia Report number: SAND2002-1319, June 2002.

• Black AR, Suo-Anttila JM, Disimile PJ, & Tucker JR, “Numerical Predictions and Experimental Results of Air Flow in a Smooth Quarter-Scale Nacelle”, AIAA 40th Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit, AIAA 02-0856, January 14-17th 2002, Reno, Nevada.

• DesJardin PE, Presser C, Widmann JF, Disimile PJ, & Tucker JR, “A Droplet Impact Model for Agent Transport in Engine Nacelles,” Halon Options Technical Working Conference, Proc. HOTWC, Albuquerque, NM, 30 April-2 May 2002, pp. 90-100.

• Disimile PJ, Tucker JR, Crosswell B, & Davis J, “Transport of Water Sprays past Generic Clutter Elements Found within Engine Nacelles” Halon Options Technical Working Conference, Proc. HOTWC, Albuquerque, NM, 13 – 16th May 2003.

9. Current Professional Affiliations

Member, American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

Member, American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)

10. Honors and awards in last five years (Jan. ’98 to present): None

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 445 GAS DYNAMICS

02A 20 AEEM 574 AERODYN MEAS LAB

03W 20 AEEM 329 ENGG MEASUREMENTS

03W 20 AEEM 676 H T FOR PROP SYS

03S 20 AEEM 329 ENGG MEASUREMENTS

03U 20 AEEM 445 GAS DYNAMICS

12. Other duties: None

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement:

Computer & Fluids Experiments in Fluids 33rd AIAA Fluid Dynamics Conference

Reviewer for the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) of the UK

Seminar, University of Dayton, Mechanical Engineering

14. Special faculty duties for co-op: None

1. Lawrence W. Dunbar

2. Adjunct Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Part time)

3. Degrees:

BS Aerospace Engineering Iowa State University 1966

4. Professional Experience:

University of Cincinnati

2003– present Adjunct Professor, AsE & EM

5. Related Experience:

1968 – present Consulting Engineer, Preliminary Design, GE Aircraft Engines

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

13DV-11618, Split Rotor Shaft Driven Lift Fan, 1996

13DV-10683, Admission Mixing Duct Assembly, 1993

13DV-10539, Noise Suppressed Exhaust Nozzles for Jet Engines, 1992

13DV-10884, Jet Engine Variable Area Turbine Nozzle, 1991

07/478304, Compressor Splitter For Use With A VABI, 1990

7. States in which registered: Ohio

8. Principal Publications

Dunbar LW, “Turbine Configuration Impact on Advanced IHPTET Engine System Mission Capabilities,” AIAA 902739.

9. Current professional affiliations:

Member American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)

American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)

10. Honors and awards:

Design & testing of compression components; as Manager of Turbine Aero Development and Design Methods Division, he implemented substantial improvements to the CF6-80C2 core turbine. Since assuming his current role in preliminary design, Mr. Dunbar has been instrumental in developing the practical application of a number of advanced engine concepts. This work has been used in establishing the GEAE Advanced Engine Technology Development Plan to satisfy the DOD IHPTET goals and advanced systems for NASA. Under his guidance and direction, GE has evolved the engine configuration preliminary design tool, FLOWPATH, into the pre-eminent tool of its type in the industry.

11. Courses taught, 1998-2003:

20 AEEM 519 & 523, Engine Design I & II, 2003-2004

12. Other duties: Not applicable

13. Recent teaching and professional enhancement activities: None.

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: Not applicable

1. Kirti (Karman) N. Ghia

2. Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

PhD Mech. & Aerospace. Engineering, Illinois Institute of Technology 1969

MS Mech. & Aerospace. Engineering, Illinois Institute of Technology 1965

BS Mechanical Engineering, University of Bombay, India 1960

4. Professional Experience

University of Cincinnati (34 years):

1995-present Herman Schneider Professor of Engineering, AsE & EM

1985-present Co-Director, Computational Fluid Dynamics Research Laboratory

1986-1999 Inst. of Computational Mechanics, Director

1978-present Professor, AsE & EM

1974-1978 Associate Professor, AsE & EM

1969-1974 Assistant Professor, AsE & EM

5. Related experience:

Nov 2001- present Associate Editor, AIAA Publications

Oct. 1991- 1999 Co-Editor, Computational Fluid Dynamics

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

1993-present CRC Press, Inc., Boca Raton, IL 33431

HME Engineering, Indianapolis, IN

Science Applications International Corp., Annapolis, MD,

1990-present Wright Aeronautical Laboratory & Air Force Research Lab, Wright-Patterson AFB

7. States in which registered: None

8. Principal Publications, 1998 - present:

• Ayyalasomayajula H, Mutnuri PK, Ghia KN & Ghia U, “Analysis of higher-order compact differencing scheme by studying flow past a circular cylinder,” Computational Fluid and Solid Mechanics, Ed. K. J. Bathe, Vol. I, Elsevier Science Publication, New York, 2003: pp 830-833

• Ghia KN, Ghia U & Thornburg H, “On Flow in Turbine Cascades and Its Management,” AIAA Paper No 2003-0764

• Marisarla S, Narayanan V, Ghia U & Ghia KN, “Prediction of Structural Behavior of Joined-Wing Configuration of High-Altitude Long-Endurance (HALE) Aircraft,” AIAA Paper No 2003-0625

• Sivaji R, Ghia U, Ghia KN & Thornburg H, “Aerodynamic Analysis of the Joined-Wing Configuration of a HALE Aircraft,” AIAA Paper No 2003-0606, NV

• Mutnuri P, Ayyalasomayajula H, Ghia U & Ghia KN, “Analysis of Separated Flow in a Low-Pressure-Turbine Linear Cascade Using Multi-Block Structured Grid,” AIAA Paper No 2003-0793

• Ghia KN, Tilmann C & Glezer A, “Aerospace Sciences, Fluid Dynamics,” The Year in Review, Aerospace America, Vol. 39, No 12, December 2002

• Fang KC, Osswald GA, Ghia KN & Ghia U, “Numerical Simulation of Low-Speed Unsteady Wake Development Behind Airfoils Using Incompressible & Compressible Analyses,” AIAA Paper No 2001-0298

• Papp J & Ghia KN, “Application of the RNG k-( Turbulence Model to the Simulation of Supersonic Axisymmetric Separated Base Flows,” AIAA Paper No. 2001-0727

• Ghia KN, Kimmel R & Smith D, “Aerospace Sciences, Fluid Dynamics: The Year in Review,” Aerospace America, Vol. 39, No 12, December 2001

• Duncan BD & Ghia KN, “Direct Numerical Simulation of Transitions toward Turbulence in Complex Channel Flows,” Recent Advances in DNS & LES, Ed. D. Knight & L. Sakell, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Boston, MA,1999: pp 131-141

• Papp JL & Ghia KN, “Modification of the High-Re RNG k-( Turbulence Model for Low-Re Near-Wall Effects,” AIAA Paper 1999-3700

• Papp JL & Ghia KN, “Simulation of Turbulent Compressible Mixing Layers Examining Compressibility Correction & RNG Based Methods for Two-Equation Turbulence Models,” AIAA Paper 1999-0320

• Ghia KN, Ghia U & Osswald GA, “Study of Unsteady Flow Separation and Its Relationship to Vortex Dominated Flow Past Maneuvering Bodies,” J of Fluid Dynamics Research, Vol. 16, No5, 1998: pp121-128

9. Scientific and professional societies:

Associate Fellow American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

Life Fellow American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)

Member American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE), American Physics Society (APS)

Member Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pi & Sigma Gamma Tau

10. Honors and awards

George B. Barbour Award, University of Cincinnati, 2000

“Professor of the Year” 1998-99

Best Paper Awards, AIAA Mini-Symposium, Dayton, Ohio 1998 & 1999

The Library Guild of the University of Cincinnati Recognition Award, 1988-2003

11. Courses taught, September 2002-August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 360 NUM METH FOR ENGDES

02A 20 EGFD 751 NUM METH TRANS PHEN

03W 20 EGFD 746 NUM METH COMP FL

03S 20 EGFD 742 TURB FLOWS

03S 20 EGFD 751 NUM METH TRANS PHEN

12. Other Duties:

• Chair, University Committee on Barbour & Cohen Awards, 2002-2003, Member, 2000-2002

• Member, Decanal Review Committee, College of Engineering, 2002-2003

• Chair, Graduate Fellow Membership Committee, 1987-1994, Member, 1994-1999, 2003-present

• Chair, Honors & Awards Committee, Graduate Fellows, 1994-2000

• Chair, College Reappointment, Promotion & Tenure Committee, 1990-2000, Member 1997-1999

• Member, Decanal Search Committee, College of Engineering, 1997-1998

• Coordinator, R. T. Davis Memorial Lecture, 1990-present

• Chair, R. T. Davis Awards Committee, 1990-present

• Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics, Class of 2000 Advisor

13. Recent teaching and professional enhancement activities:

• AIAA Focus Group on Large Eddy Simulation Methodology, 2000-present

• Ghia KN, “Analysis of Separated Flows inside Turbomachinery Cascades”, Seminar at Institute of Space & Astronautical Sciences, Tokyo, Japan, April 2003.

• Revised “Introduction to Aerospace Engineering” (20 AEEM 100), 2002-2003

• Developed interactive course on numerical methods in engineering design using MATLAB, 2001-2002

• Revised course in Turbulent Flows to teach to AEEM and MINE students, 2001-2001

• Ghia KN, “Study of Separated Flows in Turbine Cascades”, IIT Bombay, September 2001.

• Ghia KN, “Simulation and Analysis of Aero-spike Nozzle,” Seminar, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama, July 1999.

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: None

1. Ephraim J. Gutmark

2. Professor of Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

PhD/DSc, Aerospace Engineering Technion, Israel 1976

MS, Aerospace Engineering Technion, Israel 1971

BS, Aerospace Engineering Technion, Israel 1969

4. Professional Experience

University of Cincinnati (4 years)

2000-Present Ohio Eminent Scholar and Professor of AsE & EM

Louisiana State University

1998-2000 Voorhies Endowed Professor, Mechanical Engineering Department

1993-1998 Professor and Chairman, Mechanical Engineering Department

Other

1988-1993 Adjunct Professor, California State University, Northridge, CA (Part-time).

1983-1986 Senior Research Associate, Tel-Aviv University, Israel (Part-time).

1981-1983 Visiting Professor, University of Southern California, Los Angeles.

1978-1981 Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Engineering, Tel-Aviv University, Israel (Part-time).

1980 Visiting Research Associate, University of Southern California, Los Angeles.

1971-1981 Adjunct Research Fellow, Dept. of Aerospace Engineering, Technion., Israel

1970-1971 Instructor, Dept. of Aerospace Engineering, Technion, Israel.

1969-1970 Teaching Assistant, Dept. of Aerospace Engineering, Technion., Israel.

5. Related experience:

1970-1975 Research Aerospace Engineer, Israel,

1976-197 Senior Assistant to General Manager, Israel

1979-1981, 1983-1986 Chief Research Engineer, Tel-Aviv, Israel

1986-1995 Senior Research Scientist- Research Department, Naval Air Warfare Center, China Lake, CA

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

1996-present Security/DBS, Dallas, Texas, Hydraulics for Oil Explorations,

ABB Corporate Research Center, Gas Turbine Power Generation, Switzerland; Boeing Corporation, Seattle, Washington

2000-2002 ALSTOM Power Technology, Baden, Switzerland

1982-1986 Consultant, Naval Air Warfare Center, China Lake, CA

Patents:

Control of Vortex Breakdown via Near-Core Blowing, US Patent No. 6,138,955, 2000.

Interference with Vortex Formation and Control of Fluid Flow to Reduce Noise and Change Flow Stability, US Patent No. 5,402,964, 1999

Compact Cyclone Combustor For Thermal Treatment Of Waste, U.S. Patent Approved, 2001

States in which registered: None

7. Principal publications, 1998-present:

• Murugappan S, Acharya S, Gutmark EJ & Messina T, “Characteristics & Control of Combustion Instabilities in a Swirl-Stabilized Spray Combustor,” J. Propulsion and Power, Vol.19, No. 3, May-June 2003

• Allgood D, Murugappan S, Acharya S & Gutmark EJ, “Infrared Measurements of Thermoacoustic Instabilities in a Swirl-Stabilized Combustor,” Combustion Science & Technology, Vol. 175, No. 2, pp. 333-355, 2003

• Gutmark EJ, Li G & Grinstein FF, “Characterization Of Multiswirling Flow,” Proc. 5th Int’l Symposium on Engineering Turbulence Modeling & Measurements, Publisher: Springer-Verlag, 2002

• Paschereit O & Gutmark EJ, “Enhanced Performance Of Gas-Turbine Combustor Using Miniature Vortex Generators”, Proc. Comb. Inst., Vol. 29, Publisher: Combustion Institute, 2002.

• Paschereit O & Gutmark EJ, “Passive Control of Flow Instabilities in a Reacting Swirling Jet Using Vortex Generators,” Advances in Turbulence, Vol. 9, 2002.

• Grinstein FF, Young F, Li G, Gutmark EJ, Hsiao G & Mongia H, “Flow Dynamics in a Swirl Combustor,” J. of Turbulence, Vol. 3, No. 30, pp. 1-19, 2002

• Gutmark EJ, “Control of High Speed Jets,” Chapter 8, High Speed Jet Flows-Fundamentals & Applications, Taylor & Francis, Washington DC: 2002.

• Gutmark EJ, Parr T, & Parr D, “Soot formation in combustion of high energy fuels,” chapter in Advances in Chemical Propulsion, CRC Press, 2001: pp. 97-116

• Murugappan S, Gutmark EJ, Acharya S & Krstic M, “Extremum Seeking Adaptive Controller for Swirl - Stabilized Spray Combustion,” Proc. Comb. Inst., Vol.28, pp. 731-737, July 2000.

• Paschereit O, Gutmark EJ & Weisenstein W, “Flow-Acoustic Interactions as a Driving Mechanism for Thermoacoustic Instability,” Physics of Fluids, Vol. 11, No. 9, Sept. 1999: pp. 2667-2678

• Gutmark E J & Grinstein F F, “Mixing in Non-Circular Jets,” Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics, Vol. 31, pp. 239-272, 1999.

8. Scientific and professional societies:

Associate Fellow American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

Member American Physics Society

Member Combustion Institute

9. Honors and awards in last five years (Jan. ’98 to present):

Voorhies Endowed Professorship, LSU, 1998

ASME Outstanding Teacher Award, LSU, 1998 & 1999

AIAA Pre-juniors Outstanding Teacher Award, UC, 2001

College of Engineering Annual Research Award for Senior Faculty, 2003

10. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003

02A 20 AEEM 342 FND AERODYNAMICS

03W 20 AEEM 456 APPL AERODYNAMICS

03W 20 ENFD 383 BASIC FLUID MECH / HON BAS FLUID MECH

03S 20 ENFD 383 BASIC FLUID MECH / HON BAS FLUID MECH

11. Other duties:

Member, UC Council for Research, 2000-2001.

Member, College of Engineering RPT Committee, 2003

Member, AsE & EM Laboratory Committee

12. Recent teaching and professional enhancement activities:

13. Special duties of co-op faculty: none.

1. Awatef A. Hamed

2. Head & Bradley Jones Professor of Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

PhD, Aerospace Engineering University of Cincinnati 1972

MSc, Aerospace Engineering University of Cincinnati 1969

BSc, Aeronautical & Mechanical Engineering Cairo University, Egypt 1965

4. Professional Experience:

University of Cincinnati (31 years)

2001-present Head and Bradley Jones Professor, AsE & EM

1980-present Professor, AsE & EM

1986 – 1988 Director of Graduate Studies

1976 – 1980 Associate Professor

1974 – 1976 Assistant Professor

1972 – 1974 Research Assistant Professor

1968 – 1972 Graduate Teaching and Research Assistant

5. Related experience:

2001 Distinguished Visiting Professor, American University, Cairo

1997 Visiting Scientist, NASA Lewis Research Center, WPAFB

6. Consulting Experience (and patents):

General Electric; Union Carbide; Rolls Royce; Solar Turbomachinery, Inc.; Ingersoll Rand; Pignone Nuevo, Italy; Komatsu Ltd., Japan; Brown Bovary, Switzerland; Dayton Power Utilities; Northern Research Engineering Group; US Department of Energy; NASA Lewis; NASA Langley

Patents: none

7. States in which registered: none

8. Principal publications, 1998 - present:

1. Hamed A, Tabakoff W, Rivir R, Das K & Arora P, “Turbine Blade Surface Deterioration by Erosion,” Accepted J. of Engineering for Gas Turbines and Power, 2004.

2. Numbers K. & Hamed A, “Conservation Coupling Techniques for Dynamic Inlet-Engine Analysis,” J. Propulsion and Power, Vol. 19, No. 3: May-June 2003, pp. 444-455

3. Hamed A, Tabakoff W, Rivir R, Das K, & Arora P, “Turbine Blade Surface Deterioration by Erosion,” GT-2004-54328, Proc. ASME Turbo Expo 2004, June 14–17, 2003, Vienna, Austria

4. Hamed A, Das K & Basu D, “Characterization of Powered Resonance Tube for High Frequency Actuation,” Proceedings of ASME FEDSM, FEDSM 2003-45472, Honolulu, HI, July 6-11, 2003.

5. Hamed A, Basu D & Das K, “Detached Eddy Simulations of Supersonic Flow Over Cavity” AIAA Paper 2003-0549, January 2003.

6. Hamed A, Das K & Basu D, “Numerical Simulation and Parametric Study of Hartmann-Sprenger Tube Based Powered Devic of Supersonic Flow Over Cavity,” AIAA Paper 2003-0550, Jan 2003.

7. Hamed A,” How Jet Propulsion Engines Work,” Scientific American [online], Ask The Experts, Astronomy. . [May 1st, 2000]

8. Hosney K & Hamed A, “Numerical simulation of shock-sound wave interactions using compact schemes,” AJSE, Apr 2002, pp 153-164.

9. Hamed A, Das K & Basu D, “Numerical Simulation of Unsteady Flow in Resonance Tube,” AIAA Paper 2002-1188, January 2002.

10. Hamed A & Mohamed A, “Simultaneous LDV measurements of Gas and Particle Velocities in Two-Phase Flow,” Proc. 7th ICFDP, Cairo, Egypt, December 18-20, 2001.

11. Hamed A, Mesalhy O & Lehning T, “Gas-particle flows in CO2 pellet blasting nozzles,” Paper 2001-1882, Proc. XVth ISOABE, September 2-7, 2001, Bangalore, India.

12. Hamed A & Mesalhy O, “Shock Wave Attenuation in Gas Particle Flows,” Paper No. 921, Proc. 4th Int’l Conference on Multiphase Flow (ICMF 2001), May 27-June 1, 2001, New Orleans, LA.

13. Hamed A & Mohamed A, “ Assessment of Shock Induced Flow Separation and Shear Layer Mixing Predictions in Nozzles and High Speed Jets,” AIAA Paper 2001-0225, January 2001.

14. Tabakoff W & Hamed A, “Erosion Characteristics of Coated & Uncoated Turbomachinery Blade Materials,” Proc. NATO Symposium, Gas Turbine Operation & Technology for Land, Sea & Air Propulsion & Power Systems, October 18-21, 1999, Ottawa, Canada: pp. 21-1- 21-9.

15. Hamed A, Mohamed A & Saiyed N,” Numerical Predictions of Exhaust System Flow and Jet Mixing,” Proc. XIVth ISOABE, September 5-10, 1999, Florence, Italy.

16. Ali A, Hamed A, Hixon R, Mankbadi R, Moberek A, Rizk M, “Effect of Inflow Treatment on Acoustic Radiation from Large-Scale Structure in a Round Jet,” AIAA Paper 99-0083, Jan 1999.

17. Tabakoff W, Hamed A & Shanov V, “Blade Deterioration in a Gas Turbine Engine,” Int’l J. of Rotating Machinery, Vol. 4, November 1998, pp. 233-241.

18. Hamed A, Tabakoff W & Singh D, “Modeling of Compressor Performance Deterioration Due to Erosion,” Int’l J. of Rotating Machinery, Vol. 4, November 1998, pp. 243-248.

19. Jun Y D & Hamed A, “Vectorized Directional Sweep Based Parallelization Method for Factored ADI Schemes,” Int’l J. of Computational Fluid Dynamics, 1998, Vol. 10, pp. 291-299.

20. Hamed A & Vogiatzis C, “Overexpanded 2D Convergent-Divergent Nozzle Performance: Effects of 3D Flow Interactions,” J of Propulsion & Power, Vol. 14 No. 2, Mar 1998, pp. 234-240.

21. Vitaly A, Bidinger E, Grinshpun S A, Willeke K, Hamed A & Tabakoff W, “Airflow and Particle Velocities Near a Personal Aerosol Sampler with a Curved Porous Aerosol Sampling Surface,” Aerosol Science & Technology, Vol. 28, March 1998, pp. 247-258.

9. Current professional affiliations:

Fellow American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)

American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

10. Honors and awards in last five years (Jan. ’98 to present):

AIAA Awards: Advising Winning Design Teams in the AIAA Airbreathing Propulsion Team Engine Design Competition, 2000, 1999, 1998.

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003:

Advanced Propulsion Systems I (AEEM 930); Advanced Propulsion Systems II (AEEM 931)

12. Other duties:

• Army Research Lab Air & Ground Vehicle Technical Assessment Panel, 2002-2005.

• Chair, Fluids Applications & Systems Committee, ASME, 2002-2004.

• Editor, Int’l Journal of Rotating Machinery, Taylor & Francis Publishers, 2002-present.

• NASA Glenn Research Center Propulsion System Technology Committee, 2002-present.

• Editor, Int’l Journal of Computational Fluid Dynamics, Taylor & Francis Group, 1992-present.

• Fluids Applications & Systems Committee, ASME, 1990-Present.

• AIAA Airbreathing Propulsion Technical Committee, 1992-2000.

• NASA Aeronautics & Space Transportation Committee/Propulsion Subcommittee, 1997-99.

• NASA Propulsion Aeronautics Research & Technology Advisory Committee (PARTS) 1991-99.

• ASME Fluids Engineering Division Advisory Board, 1996-2000.

13. Recent teaching and professional enhancement activities:

“A Computational Study of Powered Resonance Tube Actuators,” Forum on High Speed Jet Flows, Joint ASME-European Fluids Engineering Summer Conference, Jul 16 2002.

“Erosion Considerations in Gas Turbine Materials,” 2nd Tulane Engineering Forum, Sep 21 2001.

“Erosion Prediction in Gas Turbine Engines,” Pratt & Whitney - Canada, Apr 16 1999.

“Particulate Flow & Turbomachinery Erosion,” IBM Lecture, University of Notre Dame, Feb 17 1998.

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: none

1. San-Mou Jeng

2. Professor of Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

Ph.D. (1984) Mechanical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University

MS (1982) Mechanical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University

BS (1977) Power Mechanical Engineering, National Tsing-Hua University

1. Professional Experience:

University of Cincinnati (12 years)

2002- present Professor, AsE & EM

1992 - 2002 Associate Professor, AsE & EM

University of Tennessee Space Institute

1987 - 1991 Assistant Professor, Department of Aerospace & Mechanical Engineering

1985 - 1986 Research Engineer, Center for Laser Applications

The Pennsylvania State University.

1984 - 1984 Assistant Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering

2. Related experience:

OAI/NASA consultant during 1999/2000 sabbatical leave from the University of Cincinnati

• ASEE Summer Faculty Research Fellowship, NASA Lewis Research Center, 1995.

AFOSR Summer Faculty Research Fellowship, Phillips Laboratory, 1993 and 1994.

3. Consulting Experience (and patents):

OAI; NASA; Stress Engineering; General Electric Aircraft Engines; Parker Hannifin Gas Turbine Fuel System

4. States in which registered: none

5. 8. Principal publications, 1998 - present:

• Cai J, Jeng S-M & Steinthorsson E, “Experiment and Numerical Investigation of a Macro-Laminated Radial Swirler,” AIAA-2003-0826.

• Ma Z, Jeng S-M & Benjamin MA, “Investigation on the Internal Flow of a Pressure-Swirl Atomizer with Macrolaminated Geometry Using Refractive Index Matching Fluid Method,” ILASS 15th Annual Conference on Liquid Atomization & Spray Systems, Madison, WI, May 2002.

• Xue J, Jog MA & Jeng S-M, “Influence of Geometry on the Performance of Simplex Nozzles under Constant Pressure Drop,” ILASS 15th Annual Conference on Liquid Atomization & Spray Systems, Madison, WI, May 2002.

• Xue J, Jog MA, Jeng S-M, Steinthorsson E & Benjamin MA, “Computational Model to Predict Flow in Simplex Fuel Atomizer”, 38th AIAA/ASME/SAE Joint Propulsion Conference, AIAA-2002-3710.

• Cai J, Jeng S-M & Tacina R, “Multi-Swirler Aerodynamics: Comparison of Different Configurations,” GT-2002-30464, Proc. ASME Turbo Expo 2002, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, June 3-6, 2002.

• Liao YA, Jeng S-M, Jog MA & Benjamin M, “Advanced Sub-Model for Airblast Atomizers,” J. Propulsion & Power, Vol. 17, No.2, pp. 411-417, March-April 2001.

• Chen CP, Chen YS, Shang HM & Jeng S-M, “Modeling of Turbulent Mixing in Liquid Propellant Spray,” Recent Advances in Liquid Rocket Combustion, Progress in AIAA, Ed. V. Young, 2000.

• Liao YA, Jeng S-M, Jog MA & Benjamin M, “Instability of An Annular Liquid Sheet under Swirling Air Streams,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 38, No. 3, pp. 453-460, 2000.

• Liao YA, Jeng S-M, Jog MA & Benjamin M, “The Effect of Air Swirl Profile on the Instability of a Viscous Liquid Jet,” J. Fluid Mechanics, Vol. 424, pp. 1-20, Dec 2000.

• Sakman AT, Jha S, Jog MA, Jeng S-M & Benjamin M, “Parametric Study of Simplex Fuel Nozzle Internal Flow and Performance,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 38, No. 7, pp. 1214-1218, July, 2000.

• Liao Y, Sakman AT, Jeng S-M, Jog MA & Benjamin M, “A Comprehensive Model to Predict Simplex Atomizer Performance,” ASME J. of Engineering for Gas Turbines & Power, Vol. 121, No. 2, pp. 285-294, 1999.

• Liao, Y., Jeng S-M, Jog MA & Benjamin M, “Instability of a Liquid Sheet Surrounded by Swirling Air Streams,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 37, No. 11, 1999

• Jeng S-M, Jog MA & Benjamin M, “Computational and Experimental Study of Liquid Sheet Emanating from Simplex Fuel Nozzle,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 36, No.2, pp. 201-207, Jan 1998.

• Parigger C, Plemmons D, Litchford R & Jeng S-M, “Exciplex Liquid Phase Thermometer Using Time-Resolved Laser-induced Fluorescence,” Optics Letter, Vol. 23, No. 1, Jan 1998.

9. Current professional affiliations:

American Society of Mechanical Engineers

American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics

International Liquid Atomization and Spray System (ILASS)

10. Honors and awards in last five years (Jan. ’98 to present): none

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 576 ROCKET PROPULSION

02A 20 EGFD 631 INTRO:COMB THEOR I

03W 20 AEEM 575 PROPUL & FLUID LAB

03W 20 EGFD 632 GAS TURB COMB

03S 20 AEEM 212 PROBABILISTIC ENGG

12. Other duties: none.

13. Recent teaching and professional enhancement activities:

Sabbatical spent at NASA GRC

Attended AIAA short course on Advanced Liquid Rocket System

Attended and presented papers in various AIAA, ASME, IGTI and ILASS meetings

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: none

1. Prem K. Khosla

2. Associate Department Head and Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

PhD, Science & Mathematics Punjab University, India 1965

MS, Applied Mathematics Punjab University, India 1959

BS, Applied Mathematics Punjab University, India 1956

4. Professional Experience:

University of Cincinnati (24 years)

1983-Present Professor, AsE & EM

Associate Department Head, AsE & EM

1988-90 Graduate Director, AsE & EM

83. Associate Professor, AsE & EM

Polytechnic Institute of New York

1978-79 Associate Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Applied Mechanics

1975-77 Research Associate, Aerospace Engineering & Applied Mechanics

1971-75 Consultant, Aerospace Engineering and Applied Mechanics

1967-70 Assistant Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Applied Mechanics

1965-67 Postdoctoral Fellow, Aerospace Engineering & Applied Mechanics,

1964-65 Senior Research Fellow, Aerospace Engineering & Applied Mechanics

Other

1970-71 Visiting Assistant Professor of Aerospace Engineering and Applied Mechanics, Indian Inst. of Technology, India

5. Related experience:

1975-78 Senior Scientist, General Applied Science Laboratories Inc.

1961-64 Research Assistant, Ministry of Defense, Govt. of India

6. Consulting experience (and patents): None

7. States in which registered: None

8. Principal Publications, 1998 - present:

• Khosla, P.K., and Rubin, S.G., “Direct primitive variable solution techniques for incompressible flows,” Proc. Numerical Simulations of Incompressible Flows, World Scientific, 2003.

• Khosla, P.K., and Rubin, S.G., “A review of strongly coupled algorithms for viscous flow problems,” Computers & Fluids, Vol. 30, pp. 927-936, Sep-Nov 2001.

• Walker B K, Jeng S-M, Orkwis P D, Slater G L, Khosla P K & Simitses G J, “Redesigning an Aerospace Engineering Curriculum for the Twenty-First Century: Results of a Survey,” J. Engineering Education, Vol. 87, No. 4, pp. 481-487, October 1998.

• Moore K T, Naylor B A, Walker B K, Nayfeh A & Khosla P K, “A Simple Model for and Object-Oriented Simulation of Interacting Fluid and Structural Dynamics of Feedline Systems with Weakened or Cracked Elements,” Computer Modeling & Simulation in Engineering, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 111-122, May 1998.

9. Current professional affiliations:

Senior Member American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

Member Editorial Advisory Board, Computers & Fluids

10. Honors and awards: None

11. Courses taught, September 2002-August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 100 INTRO TO AEROSP ENG

03U 20 AEEM 342 FND AERODYNAMICS

03U 20 AEEM 360 NUM METH FOR ENGDES

12. Other duties:

Member, Undergraduate Curriculum Committee

Member, College Academics and Standards Committee

Undergraduate Recruitment Committee

Member, ABET Committee

Freshman Advisor

Reviewer/Editor: Computers & Fluids, AIAA Journal, AIAA Aerospace Sciences Conference (2003)

13. Recent teaching and professional enhancement activities:

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: none

1. John W. Livingston

2. Adjunct Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Part time)

3. Degrees:

Certificate Systems Engineering The Ohio State University 1981

BS Aerospace Engineering University of Cincinnati 1973

4. Professional Experience:

University of Cincinnati

1997 – present Adjunct Professor, AsE & EM

5. Related Experience:

ASC/XRD, Wright-Patterson AFB

1993 – present Senior Aerospace Systems Design Engineer

1988 – 1993 Technical Group Leader

1985 – 1988 Aircraft Design Engineer

6. Consulting experience (and patents): Not applicable

7. States in which registered: Ohio

8. Principal Publications, 1998 – 2003: Not applicable

9. Current professional affiliations:

Member American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)

Experimental Aircraft Association

10. Honors and awards:

• Sustained Superior Performance, 1985 & 1981

• Lead Design Engineer, Global Missions Study, 1999

11. Courses taught, 1998-2003:

20 AEEM 502 & 512, Aircraft Design I & II, 1997-present

12. Other duties: Not applicable

13. Recent teaching and professional enhancement activities:

• Advanced Component-based Systems Modeling, 1998

• Formulated, managed, developed and delivered a Rapid Systems Integrated Design Environment (SIDE 1-2)

• Hypersonic New Physics Conference Briefing

• Formulated, managed, developed and delivered a rapid interactive hypersonic missile design and analysis methodology (HADO 2)

• Developed in-house fighter inlet design and engine installation programs

• Formulated advanced Object-Oriented aircraft design architecture

• Designed and built own plane

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: Not applicable

1. Jason W. Mitchell

2. Adjunct Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Part time)

3. Degrees:

PhD Aerospace Engineering University of Cincinnati 2000

MS Aerospace Engineering University of Cincinnati 1994

BS Engineering Mechanics University of Cincinnati 1992

4. Professional Experience:

University of Cincinnati

2002 – present Adjunct Professor, AsE & EM

2000 Post-Doctoral Research Associate, AsE & EM

1994 – 1995 Research Assistant, Space Engineering Research Center, AsE & EM

1993 – 1994 Research Assistant, AsE & EM

1992 – 1993 Research Assistant, NASA Health Monitoring Center for Space Propulsion Systems, AsE & EM

5. Related Experience:

2004 – present Aerospace Scientist, General Dynamics Advanced Information Engineering, US Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB

2000 – 2004 Visiting Scientist, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB

1996 Summer Intern, NASA Glenn

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

1995 – 1996 Software Consultant, Anthem Community Mutual Insurance

7. States in which registered: None.

8. Principal Publications, 1998 – 2003

• Mitchell JW, Rasmussen SJ, Redding JD & Chandler PR, “Synchronous & Asynchronous Communication Effects on the Cooperative Control of Uninhabited Aerial Vehicles,” AIAA Guidance, Navigation & Control Conference, Aug 2004.

• Mitchell JW, Sparks AG & Rasmussen SJ, “Communication Requiriements in the Cooperative Control of Wide Area Search Munitions via Iterative Network Flow,” 4th Int’l Conference on Cooperative Control & Optimization, Destin, FL, Nov 2003

• Mitchell JW & Sparks AG, “Communication Issues in the Cooperative Control of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles,” 41st Annual Allerton Conference on Communication, Control & Computing, Monticello, IL, Oct 2003 (Invited Paper)

• Mitchell JW, Schumacher C, Chandler PR & Rasmussen SJ, “Communication Delays in the Cooperative Control of Wide Area Search Munitions via Iterative Network Flow,” AIAA Guidance, Navigation & Control Conference, Aug 2003

• Mitchell JW, Rasmussen SJ, Chandler PR, Schumacher CJ & Sparks AG, “Optimal vs. Heuristic Assignment of Cooperative Autonomous Unmanned Air Vehicles,” AIAA Guidance, Navigation & Control Conference, Aug 2003

• Mitchell JW, Rasmussen SJ, Schulz CS, Schumacher CJ & Chandler PR, “A Multiple UAV Simulation for Researchers,” AIAA Modeling & Simulation Technologies Conference, Aug 2003.

• Mitchell JW & Richardson DL, “A Third-Order Analytical Solution for Relative Motion with a Circular Reference Orbit,” J. of the Astronautical Sciences, Vol. 51, No. 1, Jan-Mar 2003

• Mitchell JW & Richardson DL, “Invariant Manifold Tracking for the First-Order Nonlinear Hill’s Equations,” J. of Guidance, Control & Dynamics, Vol. 26, No. 4, pp. 622-627, 2003

• Mitchell JW & Richardson DL, “A Third-Order Analytical Solution for Relative Motion with a Circular Reference Orbit,” Advances in the Astronautical Sciences: Spaceflight Mechanics, Vol. 112, Part I, pp. 605-614, Jan 2002

• Mitchell JW, “Implementing Families of Implicit Chebyshev Methods with Exact Coefficients for the Numerical Integration of First- and Second-Order Differential Equations,” Defense and Technical Information Center Report, AFRL-VA-WP-TR-2002-3053, May 2002.

• Mitchell JW & Richardson DL, “Maintaining Periodic Trajectories with First-Order Nonlinear Hill’s Equations,” Advances in the Astronautical Sciences: Astrodynamics, Vol. 109, Part III, pp. 2415-2428, Aug 2001

• Mitchell JW & Richardson DL, “On the Control of In-Plane Spacecraft Relative Motion,” Proc. American Controls Conference, Arlington VA, 2001, pp. 730-731

• Mitchell JW & Richardson DL, “A New Kinetic Element Formulation for the Rotation of a Perturbed Mass-Asymmetric Rigid Body,” US-European Celestial Mechanics Workshop, Poznan, Poland, Jul 2000; J. of Celestial Mechanics & Dynamical Astronomy, Vol. 81, No. 1/2, Sep 2001, pp/ 13-25

• Mitchell JW & Richardson DL, “A Simplified Variation of Parameters Approach to Euler’s Equations of Motion for an Arbitrarily Torqued Asymmetric Rigid Body,” Advances in Astronautical Science: Astrodynamics, Vol. 103, Part III, Aug 1999, pp. 2489-2512

• Mitchell JW & Richardson DL, “A Variation of Parameters Approach to Euler’s Equations,” J. of Applied Mechanics, Transactions of the ASME, Vol. 66, No. 1, Mar 99, pp. 273-276

• Mitchell JW, Richardson DL & Schmidt DS, “Improved First-Order Chebyshev Methods for the Numerical Integration of First-Order Differential Equations,” Advances in the Astronautical Sciences: Spaceflight Mechanics, Vol. 99, Part II, Feb 1998, pp. 1533-1544

9. Current professional affiliations:

Member American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)

American Astronautical Society

10. Honors and awards:

• University Graduate Scholarship, University of Cincinnati, 1999-2000

• NASA Graduate Student Researchers Program Fellowship, NASA Office of Space Science, 1996-1999

• National Research Council Post-Doctoral Research Associate, National Academy of Sciences, 2000-2003

11. Courses taught, 1998-2003:

20 AEEM 636 Spacecraft Attitude Dynamics (1998); 20 ENFD 102 Mechanics II (1998, 1999, 2000); 20 AEEM 603 Analytical Dynamics (2004)

12. Other duties: Not applicable

13. Recent teaching and professional enhancement activities:

• Coordinated/Cooperative Control of Space & Air Vehicles (Invited Seminar), University of Cincinnati, 2003

• Dynamics & Control of Microsatellite Formations (Invited Seminar), University of Texas at Arlington, 2003

• Microsatellite Formation Control: Maintaining Periodic Trajectories with the First-Order Nonlinear Hill’s Equations, Air Force Research Laboratory, Air Vehicles Directorate, 2002

• Representative, AsE & EM, Inquisitive Women Summer Camp, 1998, 1999

• Member, Formulating Women’s Summer Camp Committee, 1998, 1999

• Invited Speaker, Mathematical Awareness Week, Northern Kentucky University, 1998

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: Not applicable

1. Peter B. Nagy

2. Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

Dr. Ing., Electrical Engineering, Technical University Budapest, Hungary, 1980

Dipl. Ing., Electrical Engineering, Technical University Budapest, Hungary, 1976

4. Professional Experience:

University of Cincinnati (10 years)

2000- present Professor, AsE & EM

1994-2000 Associate Professor, AsE & EM

The Ohio State University

1990-1994 Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Welding Engineering

1987-1994 Research Scientist, Nondestructive Evaluation Program

1985-1987 Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Welding Engineering

Other

1983 Visiting Assistant Professor, Physics Department, University of Trondheim, Norway

1980-1985 Research Associate, Applied Biophysics Laboratory, Technical University Budapest

1976-1980 Research Assistant, Applied Biophysics Laboratory, Technical University Budapest

5. Related experience: None

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

1992-present Visiting Scientist, Metals, Ceramics, & NDE Division, AFRL, WPAFB, Dayton

2003 Physical Acoustics Corp.

2002-03 Sheet Dynamics Limited

2001 Metasys Technologies, Inc.

2001 General Electric Power Systems

1999 Fermi National Laboratory

Patents: J. F. Hopeck and P. B. Nagy “Ultrasonic transducer for nondestructive testing of generator field coils of dynamoelectric machines,” US Patent 5913243 (1999)

7. States in which registered: none

8. Principal publications, 1998 - 2003

• Nagy PB, “Thermo-optical Modulation for Improved Ultrasonic Fatigue Crack Detection in Al and Ti Alloys,” in Nondestructive Materials Characterization with Application to Aerospace Materials (Springer Verlag, Berlin, in press).

• Carreon H, Faidi WI, Nayfeh AH, & Nagy PB, “On the Role of Material Property Gradients in Noncontacting Thermoelectric NDE,” NDT&E International (in press).

• Kalyanasundaram K & Nagy PB, “A simple numerical model for calculating the apparent loss of eddy current conductivity due to surface roughness,” Res. in Nondestructive Evaluation (in press).

• Blodgett MP, Ukpabi CV, & Nagy PB, “Surface roughness influence on eddy current electrical conductivity measurements,” Materials Evaluation (in press).

• Carreon H, Nagy PB, & Blodgett MP, “Thermoelectric Nondestructive Evaluation of Residual Stress in Shot-Peened Metals,” Res. in Nondestructive Evaluation 14, 59-80 (2002).

• Yan Z & Nagy PB, “Thermo-optical modulation of ultrasonic surface waves for NDE,” Ultrasonics 40, 689-696 (2002).

• Nayfeh AH, Carreon H, & Nagy PB, “On the role of anisotropy in noncontacting thermoelectric materials characterization,” J of Applied Physics 91, 225-231 (2002).

• Nagy PB, “Electrical Techniques in Nondestructive Testing,” in Encyclopedia of Materials: Science & Technology (Elsevier Science, Amsterdam, 2001) pp. 6016-6018.

• Carreon H, Nagy PB, & Nayfeh AH, “Thermoelectric detection of spherical tin inclusions in copper by magnetic sensing, ” J of Applied Physics 88, 6495-6500 (2000).

• Nayfeh AH, Abdelrahman WG & Nagy PB, “Analyses of axisymmetric waves in layered piezoelectric rods and their composites,” J Acoustical Society of America 108, 1496-1504 (2000).

• M. Blodgett, Hassan W, & Nagy PB, “Theoretical & experimental investigations of the lateral resolution of eddy current imaging,” Materials Evaluation 58, 647-654 (2000).

• Yan Z & Nagy PB, “Thermo-optical modulation for improved ultrasonic fatigue crack detection in Ti-6Al-4V,” NDT&E International 33, 213-223 (2000).

• Strilka T, Sajben M, & Nagy PB, “Continuous monitoring of binary mixture concentration with application to turbine blade cooling experiments,” J of Turbomachinery, 122, 570-578 (2000).

• Nagy PB, “Acoustics & Ultrasonics,” Experimental Methods in the Physical Sciences (Academic Press, San Diego, 1999) Vol. 107, Ch. 5, pp. 161-221.

• Hassan W & Nagy PB, “Experimental investigation of the grain noise in interferometric detection of ultrasonic waves,” J of Nondestructive Evaluation 18, 139-148 (1999).

• Hassan W & Nagy PB, “Experimental verification of the opposite effect of fluid loading on the velocity of dilatational waves in thin plates & rods,” J Acoustical Society of America 105, 3026-3034 (1999).

• Hassan W & Nagy PB, “Simplified expressions for the displacements & stresses produced by the Rayleigh wave,” J Acoustical Society of America 104, 3107-3110 (1998).

• Hassan W & Nagy PB, “On the anomalously low attenuation of the leaky Rayleigh wave propagating around a fluid-filled cylindrical cavity,” J Acoustical Society of America 104, 1246-1255 (1998).

• Xiao H & Nagy PB, “Enhanced ultrasonic detection of fatigue cracks by laser-induced crack-closure,” J of Applied Physics 83, 7453-7460 (1998).

• Nagy PB, “Fatigue damage assessment by nonlinear ultrasonic materials characterization,” Ultrasonics 36, 375-381 (1998).

• Chen S & Nagy PB, “Edge weld penetration assessment using the potential drop technique,” NDT&E International 31, 1-10 (1998).

9. Current professional affiliations:

Fellow Acoustical Society of America

Member: American Society for Nondestructive Testing (ASNT), American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), and Materials Research Society (MRS)

10. Honors and awards in last five years (Jan. ’98 to present):

Charles H. Jennings Memorial Award, American Welding Society, 1999

Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America, 1999

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 430 MATRIX STRUCT ANAL

02A 20 EGFD 601 ADV STRENGTH MATL

03W 20 AEEM 529 NONDESTRUCTIVE TEST; 20 AEEM 727 NONDESTRUCTIVE TEST

03S 20 AEEM 438 SOLID MECHS LAB

03S 20 AEEM 728 INTRO TO ULTRASONIC

12. Other duties:

Associate Editor, Ultrasonics

Chair, Solids & Structures Faculty Search Committee; Member, Dean’s Advisory Committee, AsE & EM Graduate Committee, AsE & EM Graduate Seminar Committee

Member, Award Committee, American Society for Nondestructive Testing

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement (selected):

• “Ultrasonic Transducers for NDE and Biomedical Applications,” Granada, Spain, 2003

• “Novel NDE Techniques for Life Prediction,” Materials Directorate, AFRL, Dayton, 2003

• “Nondestructive Detection of Subtle Variations in Mechanical Properties of Metals by Thermoelectric Methods,” University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001

• “Ultrasonic Scattering at Rough Surfaces,” Technical University of Delft, The Netherlands, 2001

• “The effects of fluid loading on elastic wave propagation in selected structures,” OSU, 1998

Special duties of co-op faculty: none

1. Paul D. Orkwis

2. Associate Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

PhD, Aerospace Engineering North Carolina State University 1990

MS, Aerospace Engineering North Carolina State University 1987

BA, Mathematics Dowling College, Oakdale, N.Y. 1983

4. Professional experience:

University of Cincinnati (12 years)

Sep. 1997 – Present Associate Professor, AsE & EM

Jan, 1991 – Sep. 1997 Assistant Professor, AsE & EM

5. Related experience:

Sabbatical, GE Aircraft Engines; Summer Faculty: NASA Glenn, AFRL Propulsion Directorate WPAFB, and AFRL Munitions Directorate at Eglin AFB.

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

GE Aircraft Engines; patent application submitted on “Hidden Blade Concept”

7. States in which registered: None

8. Principal publications, 1998 - present:

• Sondak DL, Gupta V, Orkwis PD, & Dorney DJ, “Effects of Blade Count on Hot Streak Clocking Simulations Using Linearized & Nonlinear Methods,” acc. AIAA Journal of Propulsion & Power.

• Maple, R.C., King, P.I., Wolff, J.M., & Orkwis PD, “Split-Domain Harmonic Balance Solutions to Burgers Equation for Large Amplitude Disturbances,” accepted AIAA Journal.

• Orkwis PD, Turner, M.G., & Barter, J.W., “Linearized Unsteady Solution Based Deterministic Source Terms for Hot Streak Simulations,” AIAA Journal of Propulsion & Power, Vol. 18. No. 2, March-April 2002, pp. 383-389.

• Kimmel, R., Orkwis, P., Smith, D. & Lurie, E.,“Fluid Dynamics Enters the 21st Century,” Aerospace America, Vol. 38, No. 11, November 2000.

• Kimmel, R., Orkwis, P., & Lurie, E.,“Aerospace Sciences, Fluid Dynamics, Air & Space ‘99, The Year in Review,” Aerospace America, Vol. 37, No. 12, December 1999.

• Walker, B.K., Jeng, S.M., Orkwis PD, Slater, G.L., Khosla, P.K. & Simitses, G.J., “Educating Aerospace Engineers for the Twenty-First Century: Results of a Survey,” J of Engineering Education, Vol. 87, No. 4, October, 1998, pp. 481-487.

• Orkwis, P., Wlezien, R. & Kimmel, R., “Aerospace Sciences, Fluid Dynamics, Air & Space ‘98, The Year in Review,” Aerospace America, Vol. 36, No. 12, December 1998, pp. 20-21.

• Orkwis PD, Sekar, B., Chakravarthy, S. & Peroomian, O., “Comparison of Three Navier-Stokes Equation Solvers for Supersonic Open Cavity Simulations,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 36, No. 5, May 1998, pp. 865-866.

• Disimile PJ & Orkwis PD, “Sound Pressure Level Variations in a Supersonic Rectangular Cavity at Yaw,” AIAA Journal of Propulsion & Power, Vol. 14, No. 3, May-June 1998, pp. 392-398.

9. Current professional affiliations:

Associate Fellow: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)

Member: American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), Ohio Aerospace Institute (OAI), Dayton Area Graduate Studies Institute (DAGSI), International Gas Turbine Institute (IGTI), International Society for Air Breathing Engines (ISABE)

10. Honors and awards in last five years (Jan. ’98 to present):

UC College of Engineering Honor Roll Professor, Autumn 1999

Class of 2003 Professor of the Year, 2000

ASME Propulsion TC Best Paper Award, 2001

Associate Fellow, AIAA, 2002

11. Classes taught, September 2002 – August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 211 BASIC INTEG ENGG

02A 20 ENFD 383 BASIC FLUID MECH

03W 20 AEEM 641 INTRO TO COMP FLOW

03S 20 AEEM 456 APPL AERODYNAMICS

12. Other duties:

• AIAA Fluid Dynamics Technical Committee (98-04)

• ASME Turbomachinery Technical Committee,

• AIAA Dayton-Cincinnati Council-Member at Large

• AIAA Congressional Visits Day-Team Ohio

• U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, December 2002.

• University of Genoa, DIMSET, Genoa, Italy, May 2002.

• US Air Force ARTIC Consortium, Reno, NV, 2002.

• Joint GEAE, GEPG and CR&D CFD Meeting, GEAE, Evendale OH – March 2001.

• Joint GEAE, GEPG and CR&D CFD Meeting, GEAE, Evendale OH - October 1999.

• Ohio State University, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Columbus, OH – May 1999.

• Virginia Commonwealth University, School of Engineering, Richmond, VA - Nov. 1998.

• Joint GEAE, GEPG and CR&D CFD Meeting, GEAE, Evendale OH - October 1998.

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement:

• College of Engineering Effective Teaching Institute

• US Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, December 2002.

• University of Genoa, DIMSET, Genoa, Italy, May 2002.

• US Air Force ARTIC Consortium, Reno, NV, 2002.

• Joint GEAE, GEPG and CR&D CFD Meeting, GEAE, Evendale OH – March 2001.

• Joint GEAE, GEPG and CR&D CFD Meeting, GEAE, Evendale OH - October 1999.

• Ohio State University, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Columbus, OH – May 1999.

• Virginia Commomwealth University, School of Engineering, Richmond, VA - Nov. 1998.

• Joint GEAE, GEPG and CR&D CFD Meeting, GEAE, Evendale OH - October 1998.

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: none

1. David L. Richardson

2. Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

Ph.D. Cornell University

M.S. Cornell University

A.B. Indiana University

4. Professional Experience

University of Cincinnati (Years)

1989-present Professor, AsE & EM

1982-1988 Associate Professor, AsE & EM

1977-1981 Assistant Professor, AsE & EM

5. Related experience: none

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

NASA Goddard, 1977-present; National Bureau of Standards, 1980-present

7. States in which registered: None

8. Principal publications, 1998 - present:

• Modification of the Richardson-Panovsky Methods for Precise Integration of Satellite Orbits, (with J. Vigo-Aguiar), Computers & Mathematics with Applications, Vol. 45, pp. 25-36, 2003.

• Invariant Manifold Tracking for the First-Order Nonlinear Hill’s Equations, (with J. W. Mitchell), AIAA J. of Guidance, Control & Dynamics, accepted with revisions, 2003.

• Stabilization and Control of the First-Order Nonlinear Hill's Equations, (with J. W. Mitchell), AIAA J. of Guidance, Control & Dynamics, accepted with revisions, 2002.

• A Third-Order Analytical Solution for Relative Motion with a Circular Reference Orbit, (with J. W. Mitchell), AAS/AIAA Space Flight Mechanics Meeting, AAS 02-147, January 2002, J. Astronautical Sciences, accepted, 2002.

• Dynamics of Natural and Artificial Celestial Bodies, Proceedings of the US/European Celestial Mechanics Workshop, Poznan, Poland, July 3-7, 2000, D. L. Richardson, editor (with P.K. Seidelmann and E. Vnuk), Kluwer Academic Publishers, January 2002.

• A New Kinetic Element Formulation for the Rotation of a Perturbed Mass-Asymmetric Rigid Body, (with J. W. Mitchell), Dynamics of Natural and Artificial Celestial Bodies, Proc. the US/European Celestial Mechanics Workshop, Poznan, Poland, July 3-7, 2000; J. of Celestial Mechanics & Dynamical Astronomy, Vol. 81, No. 1/2, pp. 13-25, September 2001.

• Maintaining Periodic Trajectories with the First-Order Nonlinear Hill's Equations, (with J. W. Mitchell), Advances in the Astronautical Sciences: Astrodynamics, Vol. 109, Part III, pp. 2415-2428, August 2001.

• On the Control of In-Plane Spacecraft Relative Motion, (with J. W. Mitchell), Proc. American Controls Conference, pp. 730-731, Arlington, Virginia, June 2001.

• Chaos in Artificial Satellite Motion due to Third-Body Effects, (with T. Bartler), J. Astronautical Sciences, accepted, 2001.

• A Simplified Variation of Parameters Solution for the Motion of an Arbitrarily-Torqued Asymmetric Rigid Body, (with J. W. Mitchell), AAS/AIAA Paper no. 99-460, Girdwood, Alaska, 1999; Advances in the Astronautical Sciences: Astrodynamics, Vol. 103, Part III, pp. 2489-2512, August 1999.

• “A Simplified Variation of Parameters Approach to Euler's Equations,” (with J. W. Mitchell), J. of Applied Mechanics, Vol. 66, No. 1, pp. 273-276, March, 1999.

• “Improved Chebyshev Methods for the Numerical Integration of First-Order Differential Equations,” (with D. Schmidt & J. W. Mitchell), AAS/AIAA Paper No. 98-208, Monterey, CA, 1998.

9. Current professional affiliations:

Member American Astronomical Society

American Astronautical Society

International Astronomical Union

10. Honors and awards in last five years (Jan. ’98 to present):

Departmental Teaching Award

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 695 ORBITAL MECH I

02A 20 ENFD 102 MECHANICS II

03W 20 AEEM 603 ANALY DYNAMICS I

03W 20 ENFD 102 MECHANICS II

03S 20 AEEM 111 INTRO SPACRAFT ENG

03S 20 AEEM 604 ANAL DYNAMICS II

12. Other duties:

Member of the Subcommittee on Numerical Computations of the AAS/AIAA

Chairman, College RPT Committee

Class of 2005 Advisor, AsE & EM

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement): None

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: None

1. Gary L. Slater

2. Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

University of Cincinnati Aerospace Ph.D. 1971

Massachusetts Institute of Technology Aeronautics & Astronautics M.S. 1964

University of Cincinnati Aerospace B.S. 1963

4. Professional experience:

University of Cincinnati (36 years)

2001. Head, AsE & EM

1982-present Professor, AsE & EM

82. Associate Professor, AsE & EM

76. Assistant Professor, AsE & EM

69. Instructor, AsE & EM

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

1971-72 Research Associate

1964-65 Research Engineer

Other

1963 Operations Research Engineer, Ling Tempo-Vought

5. Related experience:

AFRL Control System COE IPA 5/2002-10/2002

Flight Dynamics Laboratory Visiting Scientist 6/87-9/87

NASA Ames Research Center Visiting Research Engineer 5/81-9/81

Flight Dynamics Laboratory Visiting Scientist 1/81-4/81

General Electric Company Advanced Engine Controls Summer 1975, 1976

Air Force Aero. Research Lab. Applied Mathematics Group Summer 1974

Air Force Flight Dynamics Lab. Control Techniques Group Summer 1973

NSF Science Faculty Fellow Systems Eng. Program 1969-1970

NASA-ASEE Summer Faculty NASA Ames-Stanford Univ Summer 1966

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

Zonic A-D Corp., Cincinnati, Ohio, 1989

General Electric Co., Cincinnati, Ohio 1979-1981

U.S. Army Missile Command, Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, 1976-1977

Landrum and Brown, (Airport Consultants), Cincinnati, Ohio, 1975

Patents: Optimal Control for a Gas Turbine Engine, US Patent 4,258,545

7. States in which registered: none

8. Publications in last five years (Jan. 1998 to present):

• Slater GL, “Cooperation between UAVs in a Search and Destroy Mission”, AIAA 2003-5797, Proc. AIAA GNC Conference, Austin, Texas, August 2003.

• Slater GL, “Adaptive Improvement of Aircraft Climb Performance for Air Traffic Control Applications,” Proc. 2002 IEEE International Symposium on Intelligent Control, Vancouver, BC, Canada, October 2002.

• Slater GL, “Dynamics of Self-spacing in a Stream of In-trail Aircraft,” AIAA 2002-4927, Proc. AIAA GNC Conference, Monterey, CA, August 2002.

• Slater GL, “Delay Distribution in a Multi-Sector/Multi-Center Environment,” AIAA 2002-4768, Proc. AIAA GNC Conference, Monterey, CA, August 2002.

• Bolender MA & Slater GL, “Evaluation of Scheduling Methods for Multiple Runways,” J. of Aircraft, Vol. 37, No. 3, pp 410-416, 2000.

• Bolender MA & Slater GL, “Cost Analysis of the Departure-En Route Merge Problem,” J. of Aircraft, Vol. 37, No. 1, pp. 23-29, Jan.-Feb. 2000.

• Bolender MA & Slater GL, “Analysis and Optimization of Departure Sequences,” AIAA 2000-4475, Proceedings AIAA GNC Conference, Denver, CO, August 2000.

• Lambrecht M & Slater GL, “Departure Trajectory Modeling for Air Traffic Control Automation Tools,” AIAA 99-3719, Proc. AIAA GNC Conference, Portland, OR, August 1999.

9. Current professional affiliations:

Associate Fellow American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

Member American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE)

10. Honors and awards in last five years (Jan. ’98 to present): none

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 403 FUND CONTROL THEORY

03W 20 AEEM 352 VIBRATIONS

03W 20 EGFD 720 MULTIVAR CONTR

03S 20 AEEM 352 VIBRATIONS

03S 20 EGFD 622 OPT CONTROL

12. Other duties:

American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

National: Air Traffic Management Program Committee, 2001- present

Section: Council member, 2002- present

American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE)

Chairman, Aerospace Division, 2001-2002

Newsletter Editor & Treasurer, Aerospace Division

Chair, Aerospace Technical Program, 1999

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement

• ABET Evaluator, Aerospace programs (1998-present )

• Member, Industrial and Research Advisory Committee, AIAA/ICAS International Symposium & Exposition in Celebration of 100 Years of Powered Flight, 1999-present

• Member, Advisory Committee, Ohio Aerospace Institute, (1995-present)

• Review Team Member, NASA Ames Air Traffic Management program peer review, 1999.

• Review Team Member, Air Force Research Laboratory, Air Vehicles Directorate Technical Review, 1999.

• Chair, Aeronautics/Astronautics Disciplinary Committee, Ohio Council of Deans (1995-2001)

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: none

1. Asif Ali Syed

2. Research Professor of Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Part time)

3. Degrees:

Ph.D., Acoustics (1980), Loughborough University of Technology, UK

B. Tech (Hons), Aeronautical Engineering (1967) Loughborough University of Technology, UK

4. Professional Experience

University of Cincinnati (3 years):

2001 - Present Research Professor, AsE & EM

5. Related Experience

2001 – present: Belcan, Principal Engineer (Acoustics), Advanced Engineering and Technology Division, Cincinnati, Ohio

12/88 to 12/01: GE Aircraft Engines - Staff Engineer, Acoustic Treatment Design Technology and Acoustic Laboratory Test Methods, Cincinnati, Ohio

9/87 to 11/88: GE Aircraft Engines, Manager, Acoustic Treatment Design and Military Applications, Cincinnati, Ohio

7/86 to 9/87: GE Aircraft Engines, National Aerospace Plane (NASP) program: Senior Project Test Engineer; Manager of NASP Test Programs, Cincinnati, Ohio

10/80 to 7/86: GE Aircraft Engines, Senior Engineer, Acoustics Sub-section, Cincinnati, Ohio.

7/79 to 10/80: Rolls Royce plc, UK, Manager, Engine Sciences Group, Advanced Research Laboratory.

4/72 to 7/79: Rolls Royce plc, UK, Noise Engineer, Acoustics

1/69 to 4/72: Rolls Royce plc, UK, Stress Engineer

7/67 to 12/68: Miles Aviation and Transport (Ltd.), UK, Stress Engineer.

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

• U.S Patent Number 4,537,630, “Acoustic Impedance Measurement,” 27 August 1985. Inventor: Asif A. Syed.

• U.S. Patent Number 4,732,039, “Acoustic Impedance Measurement,” 22 March 1988. Inventor: Asif A. Syed.

• U.S. Patent Number 4,829,813, “Method and Apparatus for Non-intrusively Determining Mach Number,” 16 May 1989. Inventor: Asif A. Syed.

• U.S. Patent Number 5,702,230, “Actively Controlled Acoustic Treatment Panels,” 30 December 1997. Inventors: R. E. Kraft and Asif A. Syed.

• US Patent Number 6,203,656 B1, “Acoustic Liner Manufacture,” March 20, 2001. Inventor: Asif A. Syed.

• US Patent Number 6,182,287 B1, “Rigid Sandwich Panel Acoustic Treatment,” February 6, 2001. Inventors: Robert E. Kraft and Asif A. Syed.

7. States in which registered: none

8. Principal publications

• Syed AA & Bennett SC, “Comparison of Measured Broadband Noise Attenuation Spectra from Circular Flow Ducts & from Lined Engine Intakes with Predictions,” J. of Sound & Vibration, 1978, 56(4), pages 531 to 564.

• Syed AA, Brown JD, Oliver MJ & Hills SA, “The Cepstrum: A Viable Method for the Removal of Ground Reflections,” J. of Sound & Vibration, 1980, 71(2), pages 299 to 313.

• Motsinger RE, Syed AA & Manley MB, “The Measurement of the Steady Flow Resistance of Porous Materials,” AIAA Paper No. AIAA-83-0779, 8th Aeroacoustic Conference, Atlanta, GA April 1983.

• Fisk GH, Syed AA, Motsinger RE, Joshi MC & Kraft RE, “Measurement of Acoustic Modes and Wall Impedance in a Turbofan Exhaust Duct,” AIAA Paper No. AIAA-83-0733, Atlanta, GA April 1983.

• Syed AA & Lewis DL,“The Measurement of Acoustic Suppressions in a Flow Duct Using an Energy Flux Measurement Technique,” AIAA Paper No. AIAA-90-3949, Tallahassee, FL, October 1990

9. Scientific and professional societies

Member American Society of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

10. Honors and awards:

Managerial Award in October 1984 for the invention and development of the “Acoustic Impedance Measurement System,” alias the “Plunker.”

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003: not applicable

12. Other duties: not applicable

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement: none

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: not applicable

1. Ala Tabiei

2. Associate Professor of Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

PhD Aerospace Engineering, University of Cincinnati 1994

MS Mathematics, University of Cincinnati 1992

MS Aeronautical Engineering, Wichita State University 1988

BS Mechanical Engineering, University of Damascus 1985

4. Professional Experience

University of Cincinnati (9 years)

2001 – present Associate Professor, AsE & EM

1996 – 2001 Assistant Professor, AsE & EM

1995 – 1996 Senior Research Associate, AsE & EM

1990 – 1993 Graduate Research Assistant, AsE & EM

Other

Summer 2000 Visiting Professor, Army Research Lab, Weapons Directorate, Composite & Lightweight Structures, Aberdeen, MD

Summer 1996 Visiting Professor, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, National Ignition Facilities, Laser Program, Livermore, CA.

1995 Lecturer, School of Engineering, Oakland University, Rochester, MI.

1986 – 1987 Graduate Research Assistant, Dept. of Aeronautical Engineering, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS

5. Related Experience

• Senior Structural Analyst, January, 1995-September, 1995 Ford Motor Company / Altair Engineering Inc., Advance Vehicle Technology-CAE-CPD, Dearborn, MI

• Finite Element Analysis Engineer, October, 1994-January, 1995 General Motors / ASI, Truck & Bus Engineering, Troy, MI

• Research Fellow and Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, April, 1993-October, 1994, Department of Transportation, Turner-Fairbank Research Center, McLean, VA.

6. Consulting experience (and patents): None

7. States in which registered: None

8. Principal publications (1998 – 2003)

• Tabiei A & Ivanov I, “Fiber Reorientation in Laminated & Woven Composites for Finite Element Simulations,” acc. J. Thermoplastic Composites.

• Tabiei A & Ivanov I, “Materially & Geometrically Nonlinear Woven Composite Micro-mechanical Model with Failure for Finite Element Simulations,” acc. Int’l J. of Nonlinear Mechanics.

• Tabiei A & Wu J, “Three-dimensional Fracture Models Implementation for Explicit Finite Element Simulation With Automatic Crack Growth,” Vol. 57, No. 13., Int. J. of Numerical Methods in Engineering.

• Tabiei A, Song G & Jiang Y, “Strength simulation of woven fabric composite materials with material nonlinearity using micromechanics based model,” J Thermoplast Compos 16: (1) 5-20 Jan 2003.

• Ivanov I & Tabiei A, “Collapsible shell finite element for composite materials,” Finite Elements In Analysis & Design 39: (4) 343-354 Feb 2003.

• Tabiei A & Ivanov I, ”Computational micro-mechanical model of flexible woven fabric for finite element impact simulation,” Int J Numer Meth Eng 53: (6) 1259-1276 Feb 28 2002.

• Ivanov I & Tabiei A, “Three-dimensional computational micro-mechanical model for woven fabric composites,” Composite Structures 54: (4) 489-496 Dec 2001.

• Tanov RR & Tabiei A, “Computationally Efficient Micromechanical Woven Fabric Composite Constitutive Models,” J. of Applied Mechanics, Vol. 68, No. 4, pp. 553-560, July 2001.

• Tabiei A & Chen Q, “Micromechanics Composite Material Model for Crashworthiness Applications,” J. of Thermoplastics Composites, 14: (4) pp. 264-289 JUL 2001.

• Tanov RR & Tabiei A, “Finite Element Implementation Of A New Sandwich Homogenization Procedure,” Composite Structures, Vol. 50, No. 1, pp. 49-58, 2000.

• Ala Tabiei & Romil Tanov, “A Nonlinear Higher Order Shear Deformation Shell Element For Dynamic Explicit Analysis: Part II, Verification Examples,” Finite Elements In Analysis & Design, Vol. 36, No. 1, pp. 39-50, 2000.

• Tabiei A, Jiang Y & Yi W, “A Novel Micromechanics-Based Plain Weave Fabric Composite Constitutive Model With Material Nonlinear Behavior,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 38, No. 5, May 2000.

• Tabiei A & Wu J, “Validated Crash Simulation of the Most Common Guardrail System in the USA,” Int. J. of Crashworthiness, Vol. 5 No. 2, pp. 153-168, 2000.

• Tabiei A & Sun J, “Analytical Simulation of Strength Size Effect in Composite Materials,” Composites Engineering-Part B, vol. 31, pp. 133-139, 2000.

• Tabiei A & Wu J, “Roadmap For Crashworthiness Finite Element Simulation Of Roadside Safety Structures,” Int. J. Finite Element in Analysis & Design, Vol. 34, No. 2, pp. 145-157, 2000.

• Tabiei A & Jiang Y, “Woven Fabric Composite Material Model With Material Nonlinearity For the Finite Element Simulation,” Int’l J. of Solids & Structures, Vol. 36, No. 18, pp. 2757-2771, 1999.

• Tabiei A, Svenson A, Hargrave M & Bank L, “Impact Performance Of Pultruded Beams For Highway Safety Applications,” Composite Structures, Vol. 42, No. 3, pp. 231-237, 1998.

9. Scientific and professional societies

Member: Sigma Xi; Scientific Research Society; American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA); American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)

10. Honors and awards:

Nominated for the Discover Award by Discovery Magazine

Marquis Who’s Who in America 2000, Science and Technology 2000, World 2001

Lexington Who’s Who, 2000.

Faculty Honor Roll for teaching, 1997-1998, 1999-2000

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 480 COMPUTATIONAL MECH

02A 20 EGFD 705 F E TECH I

03W 20 EGFD 705 F E TECH I

03W 20 EGFD 706 F E TECH II

03S 20 AEEM 597 COMPOSITE STRUCT

03S 20 EGFD 706 F E TECH II

12. Other duties:

AsE & EM: Engineering Mechanics Junior Class Advisor; Recruitment & Retention Committee

College of Engineering: College Computing Committee; Computer Language Committe

Ohio Super Computer State User Group Committee (UC representative, 1997-2002)

Ohio Super Computer Resource Allocation Co-Chair (1999-2000)

Ohio Super Computer Resource Allocation Chair (2001)

Chair, Computational Structural Mechanics Focus Group (the Ohio Super Computer)

ASME Transportation Committee; ASME Applied Mechanics Composite Materials Committee (1999-present)

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement:

“Vehicle Crashworthiness”, Ohio Super Computer Center, Apr 1998.

“Explicit Verses Implicit Finite Element; Stress Update & Other Issues,” Ford Motor Company, Sep 1998.

“Validated Crash Simulation of the Most Common Guardrail System in the USA”, Ohio Super Computer Center, Oct 1999.

Micro-Mechanics for Impact Simulation of Composites Structures. DOD, PET-CCM, Chicago, Feb 7th, 2003.

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: None.

1. Mark G. Turner

2. Research Professor of Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full time)

3. Degrees:

ScD, Aerodynamics Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1990

MS, Aeronautical Engineering University of Cincinnati 1986

BS, Mechanical Engineering Virginia Tech 1979

4. Professional experience:

University of Cincinnati (4 years):

2001 – present Research Professor, AsE & EM

5. Related experience:

Spring 2000 ERCOFTAC Visitor, ETHZ, Zurich, Switzerland

1979 – 2000 Senior Staff Engineer, GE Aircraft Engines

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

Aug 2000-June 2001 AP Solutions, Inc., Cincinnati, OH

April-July 2000 Open Mind Solutions, Cincinnati, OH

June 11, 2002 US Patent 6,402,458 entitled “Clocked turbine airfoil cooling”

7. States in which registered: Ohio

8. Principal publications, 1998 – 2003

• Turner MG, Vitt PH, Topp DA, Saeidi S, Hunter SD, Dailey LD, & Beach TA, “Multistage Simulations of the GE90 Turbine,” ASME 99-GT-98, June 1999.

• Kirtley KR, Turner MG & Saeidi S, “An Average Passage Closure Model for General Meshes,” ASME 99-GT-077, June, 1999.

• Orkwis PD, Turner MG & Barter JW, “Deterministic Stress Source Terms for Turbine Hot Streak Applications Derived From Linear Unsteady Solutions,” ISOABE 1999, Florence, Italy, 1999.

• Turner MG, “Full 3D Analysis of the GE90 Turbofan Primary Flowpath,” NASA/CR-2000-209951, March 2000.

• Orkwis PD, Turner MG & Barter JW, “Linear Deterministic Source Terms For Hot Streak Simulations,” ASME 2000-GT-509, May 2000.

• Orkwis PD, Turner MG & Barter JW, “Linear Deterministic Source Terms For Hot Streak Simulations,” AIAA J. of Propulsion & Power, Vol. 18, No. 2, pp 383-389, March-April, 2002

• Lukovic B, Orkwis PD & Turner MG, “Modeling Unsteady Cavity Flows with Translating Walls,” AIAA 2002-3288, June 2002.

• Pes M, Lukovic B, Orkwis PD, & Turner MG, “Modeling Of Two Dimensional Synthetic Jet Unsteadiness Using Neural Network-Based Deterministic Source Terms,” AIAA 2002-2860, June 2002.

• Turner MG, Ryder R, Norris A, Celestina M, Moder J, Liu N-S, Adamczyk J & Veres J, “High Fidelity 3D Turbofan Engine Simulation with Emphasis on Turbomachinery-Combustor Coupling,” AIAA 2002-3769, July 2002.

9. Scientific & professional societies:

Associate Fellow American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

Member American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)

10. Honors & awards, 1998 – 2003:

NASA Group Achievement Award in 2002 as part of the Code Parallelization Team for the ANASA Turbomachinery Code for reducing turbine engine compressor analysis time by a factor of 2400:1 relative to 1992.

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003: Not applicable

12. Other duties:

Member, Turbomachinery Technical Committee, International Gas Turbine Institute (IGTI)

Former member, Fluid Dynamics Technical Committee of AIAA

Pre-college Outreach Coordinator, Dayton-Cincinnati Section AIAA

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement: None

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: Not applicable

1. James E. Wade

2. Associate Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full-time)

3. Degrees:

PhD, Aerospace Engineering Air Force Institute of Technology 1970

MS, Aeronautical Engineering Air Force Institute of Technology 1963

BS, Aeronautical Engineering University of Cincinnati 1958

4. Professional Experience

University of Cincinnati (24 years)

1980-present Associate Professor of AsE & EM

1979-1980 Associate Professor of Engineering Science, US Air Force Academy

1973-1979 Academy Chief, Advanced Engineering Mathematics, Applied Math Division

5. Related Experience:

Military

1970-73 Branch Chief, Survivability/Vulnerability Branch for Aircraft Systems, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH

1966-70 Graduate Student, Air Force Institute of Technology, Resident Engineering School, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH

1963-66 Development Engineer on X-19, AF Newark Contract Management District: Duty Station Curtiss-Wright Corporation, Woodridge, NJ

1962-1963 Graduate Student, Air Force Institute of Technology Resident Engineering School, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH

1958-1962 Engineering Project Officer, Oklahoma City Air Material Area, Tinker AFB, Oklahoma City, OK

Co-operative Work Experience

1958. Co-op Student, Boeing Airplane Company, Wichita, KS

6. Consulting Experience (patents): None

7. States in which Registered: None

8. Recent Publications:

• Taylor TW, Nayfeh AH & Wade JE, “Dynamic Response of Thick Anisotropic Composite Plates,” Composite Engineering, Vol. 4. No. R. pp. 475-486, 1994.

• Nayfeh AH, Taylor TW & Wade JE, “Transient Motion of Anisotropic Places,” Proc. NASA Space Engineering Health Monitoring Conference for Space Propulsion Systems, UC NASA Space Engineering Research Center, pp. 127-143, 1989.

9. Scientific & professional societies:

American Association of University Professors (AAUP)

American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)

Air Force Association

Engineers and Scientists of Cincinnati

National Technical Association

Retired Officers Association

American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE)

10. Honors and Awards:

1996 AIAA National Faculty Advisor Award

1995 Faculty Achievement Award

1990 US EPA Meritorious Award, Minority Research Apprenticeship Program

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003:

02A 20 AEEM 681 MECHANICS OF STRUCT

02A 20 EGFD 701 ELASTICITY I

03W 20 AEEM 361/462 INTEG AIRCRAFT ENGG / INTEG SPACECRFT ENG

03W 20 EGFD 702 ELASTICITY II

03S 20 AEEM 361/462 INTEG AIRCRAFT ENGG / INTEG SPACECRFT ENG

03S 20 ENFD 103 MECHANICS III

12. Other duties:

Faculty Advisor, AIAA Student Chapter

Education Officer, AIAA Dayton-Cincinnati Section

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement:

2002 Chapter Sponsor, AIAA Region III Student Paper Conference

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: None

1. Bruce K. Walker

2. Associate Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics (Full-time)

3. Degrees:

ScD, Aeronautics and Astronautics, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology 1980.

SM, Aeronautics and Astronautics, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology 1977.

BS (with Distinction), Aero. & Astro. Engineering, Purdue University 1974.

4. Professional experience:

University of Cincinnati (16 years)

1987 – present: Associate Professor of AsE & EM

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

1986 Associate Professor of Aeronautics & Astronautics

1982 – 1986: C.S. Draper Assistant Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics

Other

Summer, 1997: Dora Jones Visiting Fellow, Dept. Electronic Eng., University of Hull

1980 – 1981: Assistant Professor of Systems Engineering, Case Western Reserve

5. Related experience:

1989 – 1993: Associate Director, NASA Space Engineering Research Center for Health Management Systems, UC College of Engineering

1980, 1978, 1976: Summer Research Staff, CS Draper Laboratory, Cambridge, MA

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

General Electric Aircraft Engines (Evendale, OH), 2002 – present

SDL, Inc. (Norwood, OH), 2002

General Motors Powertrain Division (Milford, MI), 1996-97

Patents: B.K. Walker, M. Desai, E.Gai, “Helicopter Swashplate Controller,” U.S. Patent # 4,445,421, May 1984.

7. States in which registered: None

8. Principal publications, 1998 – 2003

• Walker BK, Saraf AP, & Godbole AA, “Robust Flight Control for Coordinated Turns,” AIAA 2003- 5553, AIAA Guidance, Navigation, & Control Conference, Austin TX, August 2003.

• Walker BK, Saraf AP, & Godbole AA, “Robust Controller Design Using LQG/LTR Method for Fighter-Type Aircraft,” AIAA Dayton-Cincinnati Aerospace Sciences Symposium, Dayton, OH, March 2003.

• Zhang H-Y, Zhang, H-G, Chen J, Patton RJ & Walker BK, “A Study on Fault-Tolerant Integrated Navigation Systems,” Chapter 15, Issues of Fault Diagnosis for Dynamic Systems, (Ed. RJ Patton, PM Frank, & RN Clark), pp. 435-460, Springer-Verlag, London, 2000.

• Walker BK, Orkwis PD, Hamed A & Jeng S-M, “Experience with Teaching Integrated Engineering to Aerospace Sophomores,” ASEE Annual Meeting, Charlotte, NC, June 1999.

• Walker BK, Jeng S-M, Orkwis PD, Slater GL, Khosla PK & Simitses GJ, “Redesigning an Aerospace Engineering Curriculum for the Twenty-First Century: Results of a Survey,” J. Engineering Education, Vol. 87, No. 4, pp. 481-487, October 1998.

• Moore KT, Naylor BA, Walker BK, Nayfeh A & Khosla PK, “A Simple Model for an Object-Oriented Simulation of Interacting Fluid & Structural Dynamics of Feedline Systems with Weakened or Cracked Elements,” Computer Modeling & Simulation in Engineering, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 111-122, May 1998.

9. Current professional affiliations:

Associate Fellow American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA)

Member IEEE, Sigma Xi

10. Honors and awards in last five years (Jan. ’98 to present):

2001 Senior Class “Professor of the Year,” AsE & EM

11. 11. Courses taught, September 2002-August 2003

02A 20 AEEM 313 MOD AND SIM PHY SYS

02A 20 EGFD 615 INTRO MOD CONT TH

03W 20 AEEM 452 FLIGHT MECHANICS

03S 20 AEEM 382 AERO VEHICLE PERF

03S 20 AEEM 452 FLIGHT MECHANICS

12. Other duties

Director of Graduate Studies, 2000 - 2004

Dean’s Ad Hoc Committee on Tuition Recovery from Grants, 2003

AsE & EM Graduate Committee, 1998-2000

AsE Undergraduate Curriculum Committee Chair, 1997-99

AsE Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, 1994-99

13. Specific programs for faculty improvement:

Session Chairman, 28th Dayton-Cincinnati Aerospace Science Symposium, 2003

IFAC Technical Committee on Detection, Supervision, and Safety for Technical Processes, 1997-present

Vice Chair, IFAC Technical Committee on Detection, Supervision, and Safety for Technical Proc., 1997-2000

Chair, Fault-Tolerant Avionics Subcommittee of Aerospace Control Technical Working Group, IEEE Control Systems Society, 1991-present

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: None

1. Trevor W. Williams September 13, 1954

2. Professor, Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics

3. Degrees:

Ph.D. Electrical Engineering, Imperial College, London, England 1981

M.Sc. (Distinction) Systems Engineering, The City University, London, England 1978

B.A. (Honours) Engineering Science, Oxford University, England 1976

4. Professional experience:

University of Cincinnati (15 years)

2002-Present Professor of AsE & EM

1992 – 2001 Associate Professor of AsE & EM

1989-1992 Assistant Professor of AsE & EM

Other

Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH (PT), Aug. 1999-Present;

Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd., University of Surrey, Guildford, England, June-Aug. 1998, June-Aug. 1999, July-Aug. 2000 and July 2001;

NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX, June-Aug. 1992, June-Aug. 1993, July-Sept. 1995, June-Aug. 1996 and June 1997-Mar. 1998 (sabbatical);

Air Force Astronautics Laboratory, Edwards AFB, CA, July-Sept. 1990.

5. Related experience:

NRC Senior Research Associate, NASA Langley Research Center, 1987-1989;

SERC Senior Research Associate, Kingston Polytechnic, 1984- 1987;

SERC Research Associate, Kingston Polytechnic, 1983 - 1984;

SERC Research Programmer, Kingston Polytechnic, 1981- 1982;

Graduate Programmer, ITT International Data Engineering Centre, 1976- 1977.

6. Consulting experience (and patents):

SDL, Oct. 1999-Aug. 2001.

Hamilton Standard, Aug. 1996-May 1997.

7. States in which registered: None

8. Principal Publications, 1998 - present:

• Williams TW & Tanygin S, “Dynamics of a Near-Spherically Symmetric Spacecraft Driven by a Stuck-On Thruster,” in press, J. of Spacecraft & Rockets.

• Williams TW & Tanygin S, “Design Technique for Stuck-On Thruster ∆v Minimization for an Asymmetric Spacecraft,” J. of Guidance, Control, & Dynamics, Jan.-Feb. 2002.

• Williams TW & Wang Z-S, “Uses of Solar Radiation Pressure for Satellite Formation Flight,” Int’l J. of Robust & Nonlinear Control, Jan. 2002.

• Williams TW, “Orbital Inspection Vehicle Trajectories Based on Line-of-Sight Maneuvers,” Acta Astronautica, Vol. 50, pp. 49-53, Jan 2002.

• “Sensitivity of the Zeros of Flexible Structures to Sensor & Actuator Location,” C.S. Inniss & T.W. Williams, IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, Vol. 45, pp. 157-160, Jan. 2000.

• Williams TW & Cheng X, “Degrees of Controllability & Observability for Close Modes of Flexible Space Structures,” IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, Vol. 44, pp. 1791-1795, Sept. 1999.

• Williams TW & Tanygin S, “Propulsion System Sizing for Orbital Inspection Vehicles,” J. of Guidance, Control, & Dynamics, Vol. 22, pp. 375-378, Mar.-Apr. 1999.

• Xu J & Williams TW, “Effects of Delays on the Closed-Loop Stability of Active Vibration Absorbers,” J. of the Taiwanese Society of Mechanical Engineers, Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 39-50, 1998. (Special issue on Dynamics & Control; Guest Editor Dr. Jer-Nan Juang, NASA Langley Research Center.)

• Williams TW, Syed A & Thompson D, “Determination of Satellite Formation Geometry & Phasing from Range Data,” Proc. AAS/AIAA Spaceflight Mechanics Meeting, Ponce, Puerto Rico, Feb 2003.

• Williams TW & Wang Z-S, “Uses of Solar Radiation Pressure for Formation-Keeping in Highly Elliptical Orbits,” Proc. AIAA/AAS Astrodynamics Specialist Conference, Monterey, California, Aug 2002.

• Williams TW & Moore K, “Dynamics of Tethered Satellite Formations,” Proc. AAS/AIAA Spaceflight Mechanics Meeting, San Antonio, TX, Jan 2002.

• Wang Z-S & Williams TW, “A Study of the Steering Law of Satellite Formation Flight Using Solar Radiation Pressure,” Proc. AAS/AIAA Spaceflight Mechanics Meeting, San Antonio, TX, Jan 2002.

• Williams TW & Wang Z-S, “Solar Radiation Pressure & Satellite Formation Flight: Analytical Results,” Proc. AAS/AIAA Spaceflight Mechanics Meeting, Santa Barbara, CA, Feb 2001.

• Williams TW& Collins PQ, “Orbital Analysis of Space Passenger Operations Depicted in ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’,” Proc. AAS/AIAA Spaceflight Mechanics Meeting, Santa Barbara, CA, Feb 2001.

• Williams TW & Wang Z-S, “Potential Non-Propulsive Stationkeeping Techniques for Picosatellite Formation Flight,” Paper 2000-4134, Proc. AIAA/AAS Astrodynamics Specialist Conference, Denver CO, Aug 2000.

• Slater GL & Williams TW, “Experience with an Integrated Spacecraft Engineering Course for Aerospace Engineering Students,” presented at ASEE Annual Meeting, St. Louis, MO, Jul 2000.

• Williams TW & Wang Z-S, “Potential Uses of Solar Radiation Pressure in Satellite Formation Flight,” Paper AAS00-204, Proc. AAS/AIAA Spaceflight Mechanics Meeting, Clearwater, FL, Jan 2000.

• Williams TW & Collins PQ, “Orbital Considerations in Kankoh-Maru Return Flight Operations,”, Proc. AAS/JRS/CSA ISCOPS Symposium, Xi'an, China, Aug 1999.

• Williams TW, “Propellant Quantity & Thrust Level Requirements for ISS Proximity Operation Vehicles,” Proc. AIAA International Space Station Service Vehicles Conference, Houston, TX, Apr 1999.

• Williams TW, “Role of the Products of Inertia in Various Spacecraft Dynamics Problems,” AAS Paper 99-118, Proc. AAS/AIAA Spaceflight Mechanics Meeting, Breckenridge, CO, Feb 1999.

9. Current professional affiliations:

Associate Fellow, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)

Senior Member, Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE)

10. Honors and awards (since 1998):

College of Engineering Neil Wandmacher Teaching Award, June 2002

NASA Group Achievement Award, July 1998.

NASA Johnson SC Automation, Robotics & Simulation Division Superior Assistance Award, May 1998.

Professor of the Year: chosen by Aerospace Engineering Seniors, 2000, and Pre-Juniors, 2000.

Nominated for College of Engineering Neil Wandmacher Teaching Award, 2001.

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003

02A 20 AEEM 515 SPACECRAFT DESIGN I

02A 20 ENFD 103 MECHANICS III

03W 20 AEEM 517 SPACECRAFT DESIGN II

03W 20 AEEM 763 SPEC TOP GRADUATE

03W 20 ENFD 103 MECHANICS III

03S 20 AEEM 513 ADV AEROSPACE DES

03S 20 AEEM 636 SPACECRAFT DYNAMICS

12. Other duties:

Associate Editor, AIAA Journal of Guidance, Control, & Dynamics, Jan. 1996-Dec. 1998

13. Recent teaching and professional enhancement activities:

Planetary Mission Design Summer School, JPL, July 2000

Spacecraft Radar Imagery short course, GDTA, May 2003

Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Surrey Satellite Technology, Ltd., University of Surrey, England

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: none

1. Richard W. Young

2. Associate Professor

3. Degrees:

PhD Applied Mechanics Stanford University 1975

MS Applied Mechanics Stanford University 1972

BS Applied Mathematics & Engineering Physics, Univ. of Wisconsin – Madison 1969

4. Professional Experience:

University of Cincinnati (28 years)

1993-2002 Assistant Dean for Academic Affairs, College of Engineering

1986-1994 Assistant Department Head, AsE & EM

1982-present Associate Professor of AsE & EM

1980-1982 Assistant Professor of AsE & EM

1976-1980 Assistant Professor of Engineering Science

1975-1976 Visiting Assistant Professor of Engineering Science

Other

1972-1975 Graduate Research Assistant Stanford University

1969 Graduate Teaching Assistant University of Wisconsin – Madison

5. Related experience:

US Geological Survey, Menlo Park, CA (part-time)

US Army - Georgia and Viet Nam

6. Consulting Experience and patents: None

7. States in which registered: None

8. Principal Publications, 1998 - present: None

9. Current professional affiliations:

Member American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE)

Member Sigma Xi

10. Honors and awards in last five years: None

11. Courses taught, September 2002 – August 2003: None (sabbatical)

12. Other duties:

Chair, College of Engineering Committee on Academic Standards

DPP Professional Standards Review Committee

College of Engineering Curriculum Committee

College of Engineering Transfer Council

UC College Liaison Committee

NCAA academic certification

Co- Liaison with UC Student Conduct Office

13. Teaching and professional enhancements in last five years:

Sabbatical leave to develop two undergraduate honors courses

14. Special duties of co-op faculty: none

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