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Promoting Cross-Disciplinary Researchers and Communities

1Robert Haber, 2,3Duane Johnson, 3Brent Kraczek

Departments of 1Mechanical Science & Engineering 2Materials Science & amp; Engineering, 3Physics

Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education

This project is an interdisciplinary effort that involves faculty in applied mechanics (R. Haber, J. Dantzig), mathematics (R. Jerrard, J. Sullivan), computer science (J. Erickson, M. Garland, L. Kale) and Physics and Materials Science (D. Johnson, N. Goldenfeld). In addition to fostering new faculty collaborations, the project is training a new generation of scientists in cross-disciplinary research and software development. Graduate students participate in weekly team meetings and in several cases are co-advised by faculty in different departments. Many of our research accomplishments could not have been realized within a conventional single-discipline research environment. We also leveraged research across CPSD and the Materials Computation Center.

Building Interdisciplinary Research Communities

CPSD has taken a leadership role in promoting and organizing the emerging research specialty of Atomistic-to-Continuum Coupling (AtCC) . This important new topic draws on expertise from the physics, mathematics, applied mechanics and materials science communities. Profs. Haber and Johnson organized highly successful minisymposia on AtCC at the 8th U.S. National Congress on Computational Mechanics, Austin, TX, July 2005 and the 7th World Congress on Computational Mechanics, Los Angeles, CA, July 2006. Both events drew leading researchers working on ATCC from diverse fields, with participants from the U.S. and Europe as well as from academia and the U.S. national labs.

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