Difference between revisions of "User:Tohline"

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Retired at the end of the 2013 calendar year — after more than thirty-one years of service at Louisiana State University (LSU) — Tohline is Director Emeritus of LSU's [http://www.cct.lsu.edu Center for Computation & Technology] as well as Professor Emeritus of LSU's [http://www.phys.lsu.edu/ Department of Physics & Astronomy].   
Retired at the end of the 2013 calendar year — after more than thirty-one years of service at Louisiana State University (LSU) — Tohline is Director Emeritus of LSU's [http://www.cct.lsu.edu Center for Computation & Technology] as well as Professor Emeritus of LSU's [http://www.phys.lsu.edu/ Department of Physics & Astronomy].   


A Fellow of the [http://www.aaas.org/ AAAS], Tohline has authored approximately one hundred articles in scientific journals and proceedings, primarily on problems related to complex fluid flows in astrophysical settings.  His expertise in utilizing high-performance computers to accurately simulate the processes by which stars fom and to simulate catastrophic events that will give rise to bursts of gravitational radiation is recognized worldwide.  Fifteen students have completed their doctoral dissertation research under his direction and, over the years, he has been a lead investigator on federal and state research or research-infrastructure grants totaling more than ten million dollars.   
A Fellow of the [http://www.aaas.org/ AAAS], Tohline has authored approximately one hundred articles in scientific journals and proceedings, primarily on problems related to complex fluid flows in astrophysical settings.  His expertise in utilizing high-performance computers to accurately simulate the processes by which stars fom and to simulate catastrophic events that will give rise to bursts of gravitational radiation is recognized worldwide.  [[User:Tohline/LSU/Students|Fifteen students]] have completed their doctoral dissertation research under his direction and, over the years, he has been a lead investigator on federal and state research or research-infrastructure grants totaling more than ten million dollars.   


[http://www.phys.lsu.edu/~tohline/resume.html Resume]
[http://www.phys.lsu.edu/~tohline/resume.html Resume]

Revision as of 23:57, 15 January 2015

Joel E. Tohline

Retired at the end of the 2013 calendar year — after more than thirty-one years of service at Louisiana State University (LSU) — Tohline is Director Emeritus of LSU's Center for Computation & Technology as well as Professor Emeritus of LSU's Department of Physics & Astronomy.

A Fellow of the AAAS, Tohline has authored approximately one hundred articles in scientific journals and proceedings, primarily on problems related to complex fluid flows in astrophysical settings. His expertise in utilizing high-performance computers to accurately simulate the processes by which stars fom and to simulate catastrophic events that will give rise to bursts of gravitational radiation is recognized worldwide. Fifteen students have completed their doctoral dissertation research under his direction and, over the years, he has been a lead investigator on federal and state research or research-infrastructure grants totaling more than ten million dollars.

Resume


 
 
 

Project #1: Online Textbook (under continual development)

HBook title Fluids.png

Much of our present, basic understanding of the structure, stability, and dynamical evolution of individual stars, short-period binary star systems, and the gaseous disks that are associated with numerous types of stellar systems (including galaxies) is derived from an examination of the behavior of a specific set of coupled, partial differential equations. These equations — most of which also are heavily utilized in studies of continuum flows in terrestrial environments — are thought to govern the underlying physics of all macroscopic "fluid" systems in astronomy. Although relatively simple in form, they prove to be very rich in nature... <more>

Project #2: VisTrails Utilization

A brief accounting of my earliest experiences with VisTrails can be found on the page, titled Learning How to Use VisTrails, on my LSU website. While on sabbatical leave at the SCI Institute during the 2010 Spring semester, I became much more proficient in my use of this very versatile scientific visualization tool. Here are some examples:

  1. A Customized Python Module for CFD Flow Analysis within VisTrails
  2. Visualizing a Journal that can serve the Computational Sciences Community
  3. January 2014: As I methodically march through various vtk (Visualization Took Kit) tools in an effort to gain a much better understanding of their capabilities, I will be documenting progress here.
  4. Tutorial developed by Tohline: Simple Cube


 
 
 

Useful Links