How Air Force experts review our advanced mechanics research?
I always feel puzzled that the cost of the F35 increases at “a supersonic speed”. Now based on our proposal review process, I might find some partial answers. In 2017 and 2018, we (including a full professor at a leading research university in the US) submitted two research proposals to the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR). Our proposal in 2017 had 7 technical concerns, but our proposal in 2018 didn’t improve at all, and had more than 30 technical concerns..
2019 ASME Congress invitation-Dynamic failure of materials and structures
Prof. Jun Xu, Dr. Scott Grutzik, and I organize one topic on “Dynamic failure of materials and structures” for 2019 ASME Congress. We invite you, your colleagues and group members to submit short abstracts before ASME’s deadline of Feb 25, 2019. More details below:
Two Doctoral Student Positions in Ice Mechanics
Aalto University School of Engineering in Finland invites application for
TWO DOCTORAL STUDENT POSITIONS IN ICE MECHANICS
The positions are in the research group of Marine and Arctic Technology.
PhD positions at George Mason University, ME Department (Controls in brain-computer interface & healthcare)
Applications are invited for PhD positions at the Algorithms in Medicine and Neuro-Technology Lab (AIMAN Lab) in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at George Mason University, Fairfax, VA.
Research
The AIMAN Lab pursues fundamental breakthroughs in biomedical cyber-physical systems. The lab’s primary research focuses on application of mathematical modeling, controls and estimation theory, and machine learning in health information technology including decision support and automated care systems, with the intention of improving the quality of healthcare, as well as brain-computer interfaces to bring neuro-enhancements to the daily consumer.
Application
Interested researchers with passion in digital healthcare and neuroscience are encouraged to send their CV to Dr. Ramin Bighamian at rbighami [at] gmu.edu.
Qualification
Experience in controls engineering, estimation theory, machine learning, MATLAB
A Master's degree in mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, or other related disciplines.
Solving incompressible finite elasticity without tears
Solving incompressible elasticity has been quite challenging numerically. The conventional approach for handling incompressibility is the so-called penalty method. A volumetric energy term enters into the strain energy and penalizes the volumetric deformation. One straightforward issue is that the penalty parameter goes directly into the tangent matrix. The bigger the penalty parameter, the worse the condition number of the matrix. This is really a manifestation of the ill-posedness of theories based on the Helmholtz free energy, in my opinion [3].
Tearing a hydrogel of complex rheology
Dear colleagues,
I would like to share with you our latest paper focusing on the fracture of hydrogels of complex rheology.
Title: Tearing a hydrogel of complex rheology
Authors: Ruobing Bai, Baohong Chen, Jiawei Yang, Zhigang Suo*
Abstract:
One week intensive DIC course, 1-5 July, Ghent, Belgium
The 7th edition of the International Digital Image Correlation (DIC) course will be held in Ghent, Belgium, 1-5 July 2019. There are still a few seats available (total participation limited to 20 to ensure maximum interaction). The course consists of lectures, hands-on data processing sessions and labs (camera set-up, 2D DIC and Stereo-DIC). Details and registration available here.
review paper: The role of adhesion in contact mechanics
Journal of The Royal Society Interface 16(151), February 2019. DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2018.0738
Michele Ciavarella Junki Joe Junki Joe Antonio Papangelo James Richard Barber
The role of adhesion in contact mechanics
Just published in Journal of the Royal Society Interface
Ciavarella M, Joe J, Papangelo A, Barber JR. 2019 The role of adhesion in contact mechanics. J. R. Soc. Interface 16: 20180738. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2018.0738