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Robert Moser (engineer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert D. Moser
Born1956
United States
Nationality United States
Alma materMIT
Stanford University
Known forfluid dynamics, turbulent flows, Uncertainty Quantification
AwardsNASA Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement (1995)
Scientific career
FieldsMechanical engineering, computational science
InstitutionsNASA Ames, UIUC, University of Texas
Doctoral advisorParviz Moin

Robert D. Moser is an American Professor of engineering, noted for his studies of spectral methods, turbulence, and uncertainty quantification. He is the W. A. “Tex” Moncrief Jr. Chair in Computational Engineering and Sciences and is professor of mechanical engineering in thermal fluid systems at the University of Texas at Austin. Before coming to The University of Texas at Austin, he was a research scientist at the NASA-Ames Research Center and then a professor of theoretical and applied mechanics at the University of Illinois.

In 2009, he was appointed deputy director of the PECOS center (Center for Predictive Engineering and Computational Sciences) at the University of Texas.[1] Currently he is the director of PECOS and the deputy director of the Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences.[2]

He received his undergraduate degree from MIT and his Ph.D. under Parviz Moin in 1984 from Stanford University. He is a recipient of the NASA Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement.[3] He is a fellow of the American Physical Society.[4]

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