Besides academic activities, the Aerospace Engineering department and faculty are
responsible for a substantial amount of research. Much of this work is conducted collaboratively
with industry and government. The theoretical, computational, experimental, and applied
research efforts fall generally into the following areas: Aerodynamics, Fluid Mechanics,
Aircraft Structures, Solid Mechanics, Composites, Materials, Flight Mechanics, Controls,
Simulation and Astrodynamics.
PhD Coordinator and Marvin J. Gordon Distinguished Professor
Research interests include supersonic and hypersonic flows, aero-acoustics, computational
fluid dynamics, magnetohydrodynamics and bio-fluids.
Current/recent research includes the following:
Development and application of computer codes for Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS),
including high speed turbulent flows (e.g., jet exhaust, Chevron design, heat transfer)
Development and application of computer codes for Magnetohydrodynamics (MHD), including
boundary conditions and flow control
Code development and application for Bio-fluids applications, including blood flow
in arteries, heart valves, around knee and hip implants, and with pharmaceuticals
Development of codes for parallel computing
Noise prediction schemes for aircraft interior
Computation of chemically reacting hypersonic flows
Application of CFD to solar energy and wind energy developments
Dr. Suresh Keshavanarayana
Chair and M.S. Program Coordinator
Research interests include aircraft structures/solid mechanics/composites.
Current/recent research includes the following:
In-plane Elasto-Plastic charaterization of composite materials
Post-peak stress degradation measurement for composite materials
Hyperelastic material modeling and characterization of elastomers and honeycomb cores.
Generation of fatigue based severity factors for fastener joints
Dynamic characterization of composite materials
Scaling effects on the tensile strain rate sensitivity of composite materials
Load signal modulation in dynamic tension and shear tests
Evaluation of FE fastener modeling techniques for airframe crash simulations
Process induced residual stresses around fastener holes in multi-directional laminates
Cure monitoring using embedded sensors for composite repair applications
Process induced residual stresses in repair patches bonded using heating pads
Parasitic effects of embedded tubular sensors in laminated composites
Dr. Nadia Kianvashrad
Assistant Professor
Research interests include computational aerodynamics, hypersonic flows, computational
shock wave laminar and turbulent boundary layer interactions, unsteady aerodynamics,
non-equilibrium hypersonic flows, energy deposition for flow and flight control, higher-order
methods for computational fluid dynamics, automated design optimization using computational
fluid dynamics, reduced order modeling of high-speed flows, and theoretical fluid
dynamics with particular emphasis on the solution of engineering problems.