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Diane Henderson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Diane Marie Henderson is an American applied mathematician, specializing in fluid dynamics and mathematical oceanography.[1] Unusually for a mathematics professor, some of her research involves physical experiments with wave tanks, high speed cameras, and oil droplets.[2]

Henderson earned her Ph.D. in physical oceanography[2] from the University of California, San Diego in 1990. Her dissertation, Faraday Waves, was supervised by John W. Miles.[3] She is a professor of mathematics at Pennsylvania State University[4] and one of two faculty members leading the William G. Pritchard Fluid Mechanics Laboratory at Pennsylvania State University.[5]

Henderson is a 1992 Packard Foundation Fellow.[6] She was awarded a Sloan Research Fellowship in 1996.[7]

References

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  1. ^ Douglas, Jonathan (January 31, 2017), "Scholars collaborate on fluid modeling problems", Brown Daily Herald, retrieved 2019-08-20
  2. ^ a b Brown, Nancy Marie (January 1, 1998), "On the Pinch-Off of a Pendant Drop", Penn State News
  3. ^ Diane Henderson at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. ^ Faculty, Pennsylvania State University Department of Mathematics, retrieved 2019-08-20
  5. ^ William G. Pritchard Fluid Mechanics Laboratory, retrieved 2019-08-20; Belmonte, Andrew, Experimental Laboratories in US Mathematics Departments, Pennsylvania State University Department of Mathematics, retrieved 2019-08-20
  6. ^ Diane M. Henderson, 1992 Fellow, The David and Lucile Packard Foundation, retrieved 2019-08-20
  7. ^ "Sloan Foundation Awards Fellowships to 100 Researchers", The Chronicle of Higher Education, May 3, 1996
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