67th annual meeting

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23 – 25 November 2014 • San Francisco, California American Physical Society 67th Annual Meeting Division of Fluid Dynamics ®

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  • 23 25 November 2014 San Francisco, California

    American Physical Society67th Annual Meeting

    Division of Fluid Dynamics

  • Meeting Schedule-at-a-Glance

    Free WiFi is available in the Convention Center, Level 2 and Level 3 - Lobby. The network is: APS2014. No password is required.

    Instructions to Speakers, Session Chairs and All Poster Presenters . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

    Useful Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Registration Desk Hours / Coat Check Hours / Speaker Ready Room Hours / Exhibits and Gallery of Fluid Motion HoursChildCareGrants,TravelAwardsandCertificateofParticipation Rsum Help Desk

    Saturday, 22 November08:00 -16:00 Professional Skills Development Workshop for

    Women PhysicistsMarriott Marquis 18th Floor VIP Meeting Room

    Sunday, 23 November08:00 09:57 Session A: Concurrent Sessions Convention Center, Session Rooms09:57 10:25 Refreshment Break Convention Center, Level 2 and Level 3 - Lobby09:57 10:25 Rsum Help Desk Open Convention Center, Level 2 - Lobby10:25 12:30 Session B: Presentation of Awards and DFD Fellowships

    Followed by Otto Laporte Lecture and Corrsin Award LectureConvention Center, Level 1 - Hall

    12:30 13:35 Lunch (on your own)12:35 13:30 Young Investigator Workshop Marriott Marquis, Club Room12:35 13:30 Scientist-Reporter Workshop: How to Tell Your Science Story Convention Center, Level 3 - Alcove A13:35 14:10 Session C: Invited Lectures Convention Center, Room 3001/3003 or 3009/301114:10 14:15 Mini Break14:15 16:25 Session D: Concurrent Sessions Convention Center, Session Rooms16:25 16:45 Refreshment Break Convention Center, Level 2 and Level 3 - Lobby16:25 16:45 Rsum Help Desk Open Convention Center, Level 2 - Lobby16:45 18:03 Session E: Concurrent Sessions Convention Center, Session Rooms18:15 19:00 Session F1: Poster Session Convention Center, Level 2 - Lobby18:15 19:00 Session F2: Student Poster Competition Convention Center, Level 3 - Lobby19:00 21:30 APS/DFD Reception Convention Center, Level 1 - Hall19:00 21:30 Scientist-Reporter Get Together: How to Tell Your Science Story Convention Center, Level 1 - Hall (see designated table)Monday, 24 November08:00 10:10 Session G: Concurrent Sessions Convention Center, Session Rooms10:10 10:30 Refreshment Break Convention Center, Level 2 and Level 3 - Lobby10:10 10:30 Rsum Help Desk Open Convention Center, Level 2 - Lobby10:30 12:40 Session H: Concurrent Sessions Convention Center, Session Rooms12:40 14:00 Lunch (on your own)12:50 13:50 Student Lunch Marriott Marquis, Golden Gate A Room12:50 13:50 Fluids Education Lunch Workshop:

    Simple In-Class Active Learning ActivitiesMarriott Marquis, Foothill G Room

    12:50 13:50 Women in Fluids Networking Lunch wichcraft:868MissionStreet(WestfieldCenter)14:00 14:35 Session J: Invited Lectures Convention Center, Room 3001/3003 or 3009/301114:35 14:40 Mini Break14:40 15:15 Session K: Invited Lectures Convention Center, Room 3001/3003 or 3009/301115:15 15:35 Refreshment Break Convention Center, Level 2 and Level 3 - Lobby15:15 15:35 Rsum Help Desk Open Convention Center, Level 2 - Lobby15:25 Announcement of Gallery of Fluid Motion Award Winners

    and Poster Session Competition WinnersConvention Center, Level 3 - Lobby (by GFM Video Display)

    15:35 18:11 Session L: Concurrent Sessions Convention Center, Session Rooms17:30 19:00 Meet the APS Journal Editors Reception Convention Center, Level 3 - Lobby19:00 20:30 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Reception Marriott Marquis, Mission Grille RoomTuesday, 25 November08:00 10:10 Session M: Concurrent Sessions Convention Center, Session Rooms10:10 10:30 Refreshment Break Convention Center, Level 2 and Level 3 - Lobby10:10 10:30 Rsum Help Desk Open Convention Center, Level 2 - Lobby10:30 11:05 Session N: Invited Lectures Convention Center, Room 3001/3003 or 3009/301111:05 11:10 Mini Break11:10 11:30 Session P: Invited Lectures (Andreas Acrivos Dissertation Award

    Lecture and Franois N . Frenkiel Award Lecture)Convention Center, Room 3001/3003 and 3009/3011

    11:30 13:05 Lunch (on your own)13:05 15:41 Session R: Concurrent Sessions Convention Center, Session Rooms

  • 1

    67th Annual Meeting of the Division of Fluid Dynamics23 25 November 2014 San Francisco, CATable of ContentsWelcome .......................................................................................................................................................................... 2Local Organizing Committee ........................................................................................................................................ 2APS/DFD 2014 Officers and Committees..................................................................................................................... 3Useful Information

    Registration Desk Hours ...................................................................................................................................... 5Coat Check Hours ................................................................................................................................................. 5Child Care Grants, Travel Awards and Certificate of Participation ................................................................ 5Speaker Ready Room Hours ................................................................................................................................ 5Exhibits and Gallery of Fluid Motion .................................................................................................................. 5Wireless Internet ................................................................................................................................................... 5Rsum Help Desk ................................................................................................................................................ 5Instructions to Speakers and Session Chairs ................................................................................................... 5Instructions for All Poster Set Ups ..................................................................................................................... 5

    Other EventsProfessional Skills Development Workshop for Women Physicists .............................................................. 6Scientist-Reporter Workshop: How to Tell Your Science Story .................................................................. 6Young Investigator Workshop ............................................................................................................................. 6F1: Poster Session and F2: Student Poster Competition ................................................................................ 6APS/DFD Reception .............................................................................................................................................. 7Student Lunch........................................................................................................................................................ 7Fluids Education Lunch Workshop: Simple In-Class Active Learning Activities ......................................... 8Women in Fluids Network Lunch ........................................................................................................................ 8Meet the APS Journal Editors Reception ........................................................................................................... 8Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Reception ............................................................................................................ 8

    Prizes, Awards and Fellowships ................................................................................................................................... 9Invited Lectures, Minisymposia and Focus Sessions ..............................................................................................11Instructions to Speakers, Session Chairs and All Poster Presenters ................................................................... 13Gallery of Fluid Motion Posters .................................................................................................................................. 15

    (Note: F1: Poster Session and F2: Student Poster Competition, see pages 60 67)Gallery of Fluid Motion Videos ................................................................................................................................... 18Exhibits .......................................................................................................................................................................... 22Session Key ................................................................................................................................................................... 27Program Summary ....................................................................................................................................................... 28Schedule of Papers

    Sunday, 23 November ......................................................................................................................................... 37F1: Poster Session ..................................................................................................................................... 60F2: Student Poster Competition ............................................................................................................... 66

    Monday, 24 November ........................................................................................................................................ 69Tuesday, 25 November ........................................................................................................................................ 97

    Index of Authors ..........................................................................................................................................................117

    Cover photo: Andrew Zarivny | Shutterstock.com

  • 2

    Welcome

    On behalf of the Local Organizing Committee, we welcome you to the 67th Annual Meeting of the American Physical Societys Division of Fluid Dynamics (DFD)! After more than six decades of successful and continuously growing meetings across the United States, we are very excited to host the 2014 DFD meeting in San Francisco, California. Welcome to the Golden State and welcome to the Bay Area.

    Since the first annual meeting of the DFD hosted by the Naval Ordnance Laboratory in White Oak, Maryland, this gathering has developed into one of the largest meet ings in fluid dynamics worldwide. This year, our tech nical program includes a record of nearly 2,800 contributed abstracts in 36 parallel sessions and 145 entries to the Gallery of Fluid Motion. We look forward to 105 technical posters of which 32 student posters will be judged and best poster prizes will be awarded during the meeting.

    In addition to the numerous contributed presentations, we look forward to this years awards and invited lectures, as well as minisymposia and focus session presentations on a few selected topics in fluid dynamics. We also welcome other special programs including our Student Lunch, Young Investigator Work-shop, Fluids Education Lunch Workshop, Scientist- Reporter Workshop: How to Tell Your Science Story and the Rsum Help Desk, to name a few.

    A sincere thank you goes out to all involved with the coordination of this meeting. We particularly acknowledge the various contributions of faculty, staff and students of the various universities involved, as well as those of Peggy Holland and Monica Malouf of Meetings and More who provided invaluable expertise and assistance without which the organization of this meeting would not have been possible. We are also grateful to Donald Mewha from the American Physical Society for his valuable help and patience in handling the numerous abstracts submitted to the meeting.

    On behalf of our colleagues on the Organizing Com-mittee, we wish you a very productive and enjoyable meeting and a pleasant stay in San Francisco.

    Sanjiva Lele and Gianluca Iaccarinoon behalf of the Local Organizing Committee

    Local Organizing CommitteeStanford University

    Juan AlonsoJohn Eaton

    Oliver FringerGianluca Iaccarino - Co-Chair

    Matthias IhmeJeffrey Koseff

    Sanjiva Lele - ChairDavid Lentink

    Ali ManiParviz Moin

    Manu PrakashJuan SantiagoEric ShaqfehLeif ThomasSindy Tang

    University of California BerkeleyF. Katopodes Chow

    Phil MarcusM. Reza Alammer Sava

    Shawn ShaddenAndrew SzeriEvan Variano

    Santa Clara UniversityGodfrey Mungal

    Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryAndy Cook

    Jeffrey Hittinger

    Sandia National LaboratoriesJackie Chen

    Lawrence Berkeley National LaboratoryPhil Colella

    NASA Ames Research CenterNagi Mansour

    Michael RogersKarim Shariff

    Alan Wray

    Conference and Administrative CoordinatorsMeeting Logistics

    Peggy HollandMonica Malouf

    Margaret McDonaldMeetings and More

    RegistrationKristi Despain Woolston

    Orchid Solutions

    Scientific ProgramDonald Mewha

    American Physical Society

  • 3

    APS/DFD 2014 Officers and Committees

    Executive Committee

    Chair: Nadine Aubry (11/13 - 10/14)Northeastern University

    Chair-Elect: James Duncan (11/13 - 10/14)University of Maryland - College Park

    Vice Chair: Ellen Longmire (11/13 - 10/14)University of Minnesota - Minneapolis

    Past Chair: James Riley (11/13 - 10/14)University of Washington

    Councilor: James Wallace (01/11 - 12/14)University of Maryland - College Park

    Secretary/Treasurer: Karen Flack (11/12 - 10/15)US Naval Academy

    Member-at-Large: Sanjiva Lele (11/11 - 10/14)Stanford University

    Member-at-Large: Detlef Lohse (11/11 - 10/14)University of Twente

    Member-at-Large: Jonathan Freund (11/12 - 10/15)University of Illinois - Urbana

    Member-at-Large: Beverley McKeon (11/12 - 10/15)California Institute of Technology

    Member-at-Large: Paul Linden (11/13 - 10/16)University of Cambridge

    Member-at-Large: Robert Moser (11/13 - 10/16)University of Texas - Austin

    Nominating Committee8 members, staggered 2-year terms

    Ivan Marusic (12/14), ChairHoward H. Hu (12/14)

    Constantine Megaridis (12/14)Minami Yoda (12/14)

    Said Elghobashi (12/15), Vice ChairJohn Foss (12/15)

    Gareth McKinley (12/15)Samuel Paolucci (12/15)

    Program Committee8 members, staggered 3-year terms

    James Duncan, ChairEllen Longmire, Vice ChairAndrew Belmonte (12/14)Daniel J. Bodony (12/14)

    Eric Lauga (12/14)Jonathan Posner (12/15)Lian-Ping Wang (12/15)

    Ranga Narayanan (12/16)

    Fellowship Committee8 fellows, staggered 2-year terms

    Ellen Longmire, ChairJames Duncan, Vice ChairDan S. Henningson (12/14)Joseph C. Klewicki (12/14)Richard Lueptow (12/14)

    Kyle Squires (12/14)Hyung Jin Sung (12/15)

    PK Yeung (12/15)

    External Affairs Committee8 members, staggered 3-year termsCharles W. Henoch (12/14), Chair

    David Santillian (12/14)Lawrence Ukeiley (12/14)Jun Sakakibara (12/15)Anne Staples (12/15)

    Oleg V. Vasilyev (12/15)Ken Christensen (12/16)

    Beverly McKeon (12/16), Vice Chair

    Fluid Dynamics Prize Selection Committee

    8 members, staggered 2-year termsMoshe Matalon (12/14), Chair

    Yukio Kaneda (12/14)Kathleen J. Stebe (12/14)John C. Wettlaufer (12/14)

    Jimmy Feng (12/15)Michael Plesniak (12/15), Vice Chair

    Jose Weisfreid (12/15)Elaine Oran, 2013 Prize Recipient

  • 4

    APS/DFD 2014 Officers and Committees

    Corrsin Award Selection Committee

    8 members, staggered 2-year termsPaul H. Steen (12/14), Chair

    Emily S. C. Ching (12/14)Sandip Ghosal (12/14)

    Paul Neitzel (12/15), Vice ChairDemitrios Papageorgiou (12/15)

    Yuriko Renardy (12/15)Stephen Wereley (12/15)

    Michael Brenner, 2013 Award Recipient

    Acrivos Award Selection Committee

    7 members, staggered 2-year termsKausik Sarkar (12/14), Chair

    Alberto Aliseda (12/14)Prosenjit Bagchi (12/14)Arezoo Ardekani (12/15)

    Bala Balachandar (12/15), Vice ChairDaniel Haworth (12/15)Pavlos Vlachos (12/15)

    Frenkiel Award Selection Committee

    7 members, staggered 2-year termsSharath S. Girimaji (12/14), Chair

    Malcolm J. Andrews (12/14)Howard A. Stone (12/14), AE from POF

    Kendra V. Sharp (12/14)Peyman Givi (12/15)

    Sutanu Sarkar (12/15), Vice ChairArne Johansson (12/15)

    Committee on Media & Science Relations

    6 members, staggered 2-year termsRajat Mittal (12/14), Chair

    John O. Dabiri (12/14)David L. Hu, (12/14)

    Ann Karagozian (12/14)Jeannette Yen (12/14)

    Bud Homsy (12/15), Vice Chair

    Committee on Educational & Career Outreach

    6 members, staggered 2-year termsFrank G. Jacobitz (12/14), Chair

    David R. Dowling (12/14)Rachel Pepper (12/14)

    Hao Lin (12/15), Vice ChairCarolyn Ren (12/15)Reza Sheikhi (12/15)

    Division Website Development OfficerJeff Eldredge

    Gallery of Fluid Motion Coordinator

    Ken Kiger

  • 5

    Useful Information

    All events will be held at the Moscone West Convention Center, unless noted under the event description.

    Registration Desk HoursConvention Center, Level 1 - LobbySaturday, 22 November 13:00 20:00Sunday, 23 November 07:00 17:00Monday, 24 November 07:30 17:00Tuesday, 25 November 07:30 15:00

    Coat Check HoursConvention Center, Level 1 - LobbySunday, 23 November 07:00 22:00Monday, 24 November 07:30 19:00Tuesday, 25 November 07:30 16:30

    Child Care Grants, Travel Awards and Certificate of ParticipationIf you are a recipient of a Child Care Grant, Travel Award or need a Certificate of Participation, please go to the On-Site Registration desk located at registration.

    Speaker Ready Room HoursConvention Center, Level 2 - Alcove FSaturday, 22 November 13:00 20:00Sunday, 23 November 07:00 18:15Monday, 24 November 07:30 18:15Tuesday, 25 November 07:30 14:00

    Exhibits and Gallery of Fluid Motion HoursConvention Center, Level 2 Lobby (Exhibits)Convention Center, Level 3 Lobby (Gallery)Sunday, 23 November 07:00 17:00 and 18:15 19:00Monday, 24 November 07:30 17:00Tuesday, 25 November 07:30 11:30

    The Exhibit Hall showcases products from industry and government sponsors. Please refer to the list of exhibi-tors starting on page 22. Please look at the Gallery of Fluid Motion Poster and Video Listings found on pages 15 21.

    Wireless Internet(Sunday Tuesday)Convention Center, Level 2 and Level 3 LobbySupported by: Department of Mechanical Engineering Stanford University

    Complimentary WiFi is provided by the Department of Mechanical Engineering Stanford University. Complimentary service will be provided in the lobby areas of Level 2 and Level 3 of Moscone West. Click on APS2014 to gain access. No password is needed.

    Rsum Help DeskSunday Tuesday (during refreshment breaks)Convention Center, Level 2 - LobbyOrganized by: Frank Jacobitz ([email protected])Are you ready to apply for faculty, postdoc and research positions? Members of the DFD experienced in hiring would like to help you out by taking a look at your C.V. and a sample cover letter or research/teaching state-ments. We can give you tips about most effectively presenting yourself in todays extremely competitive job market. How will you stand out from hundreds of other applicants? Make sure your rsum isnt whats holding you back! The table will be staffed during the refresh-ment breaks, and there will be a sign-up sheet at the desk for other appointment times.

    Instructions to Speakers and Session ChairsSee page 13.

    Instructions for All Poster Session Set UpsGallery of Fluid Motion Posters, F1: Poster Session and F2: Student Poster Competition.See page 14.

  • 6

    Other Events

    Saturday, 22 November

    Professional Skills Development Workshop for Women Physicists08:00 16:00Marriott Marquis 18th Floor, VIP Meeting RoomSupported by: National Science FoundationOrganized by: APS Committee on the Status of Women in PhysicsContact: Deanna Ratnikova ([email protected])

    REGISTRATION IS NOW CLOSED FOR THIS EVENT.

    This workshop is designed to provide women physicists with professional training in effective negotiation and communication skills as well as a special opportunity for networking.

    Sunday, 23 November

    Scientist-Reporter Workshop: How to Tell Your Science Story12:35 13:30Convention Center, Level 3 - Alcove ASupported by: Army High Performance Computing Research Center Stanford UniversityOrganized by: DFD Committee on Media & Science Relations(Free, Ticketed Event)TO REGISTER, GO TO: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1MVv6g9JNt4tA31M8KE4iaLS7yVLTZj7z3XOaUDxHpYc/edit#gid=0

    Want to share your research with the public? Five experts lead a workshop on ways to draw attention to your research. Join science journalist Flora Lichtman, whose work has appeared on NPR, and in The New York Times and Popular Science; Jason Bardi, writer and Director of Media Services at AIP; Nicole Sharp, a fluid mechanics blogger; Rachel Levy, creator of Grandma got STEM and biomechanic David Hu for a workshop on disseminating your research to news outlets. A boxed lunch will be provided for the first 50 to sign up, but you must register before November 17th to receive lunch. After that date, you are welcome to attend but lunch is not guaranteed.

    Young Investigator Workshop12:35 13:30Marriott Marquis, Club RoomStudent Poster Competition is supported by: Department of Mechanical Engineering Stanford University

    Organized by: Juan Alonso, Stanford University ([email protected]) and Gianluca Iaccarino, Stanford University ([email protected])(Free, Ticketed Event)TO REGISTER, GO TO: http://web.stanford.edu/~jops/apsdfdworkshopform.fb

    Program directors from NSF, AFOSR and ONR will lead a luncheon discussion on their agencies programs for early career researchers. To attend this free workshop/lunch, attendees must be registered for the DFD meet-ing and be eligible for at least one of the awards. Space is limited and attendees are required to signup in advance by completing the registration form online. Eligibility requirements and additional information on the CAREER Program and the Young Investigator Programs can be found at http://tinyurl.com/NSF- CAREER, http://tinyurl.com/AFOSR-YIP, and http://tinyurl.com/ONR-YIP.

    F1: Poster Session and F2: Student Poster Competition18:15 19:00Convention Center, Level 2 - Lobby (F1) andLevel 3 - Lobby (F2)Student Poster Competition is supported by: Department of Mechanical Engineering Stanford University

    Organized by: Matthias Ihme, Stanford University ([email protected]) and Ali Mani, Stanford University ([email protected])Please join us for a beverage at the APS/DFD PosterSession and Student Poster Competition which will be held Sunday prior to the APS/DFD reception. Student posters will be judged and awarded 1st and 2nd prize for Best Poster in several categories. Winners in each category will receive awards and be noted in the DFD newsletter. This is an opportunity for graduate and undergraduate students to enhance their presentation skills and build their professional network. Winners will be announced Monday at 15:25 during the afternoon refreshment break by the Gallery of Fluid Motion video display on Level 3.

  • 7

    Other Events

    Sunday, 23 November (continued)

    APS/DFD Reception19:00 21:30Convention Center, Level 1 - HallCome visit with colleagues and interact with others in the field at the annual APS/DFD reception. Always a highlight of the meeting, this reception is included in the registration fee for those who register as APS Members, Nonmem-bers, Graduate Students, and Retired Members. Additional tickets may be purchased for $100 each.

    Scientist-Reporter Get-Together With How to Tell Your Science Story Workshop Speakers19:00 21:30Convention Center, Level 1 - HallAt the reception on Sunday night, join us for an informal get-together with workshop speakers at a designated table. Feel free to stop by and pitch your story.

    Monday, 24 November

    Student Lunch12:50 13:50Marriott Marquis - Golden Gate A RoomSupported by: Army High Performance Computing Research Center Stanford University Organized by: Gianluca Iaccarino, Stanford University ([email protected])(Free, Ticketed Event)TO REGISTER, GO TO: http://web.stanford.edu/~jops/apsdfdlunchform.fb

    Students attending the meeting will have the opportunity to participate in a discussion with an expert on various topics. Each expert will host an informal discussion over a complimentary lunch. Please note: You must be registered for the conference prior to signing up. Space is limited to 8 students per table and available on a first come, first served basis. Interested students must sign up in advance by completing the registration online at: http://web.stanford.edu/

    ~jops/apsdfdlunchform.fb. Remaining seats will be available at the On-Site Registration desk. Tickets will be included with your conference materials which can be picked up at the registration desk. You must be at your table by 12:55 or your seat will be released for someone else to use.

    1. Michael Plesniak, George Washington University. Bio fluid mechanics, cardiovascular flows, turbu-lence transport and mixing enhancement.

    2. Tim Colonius, California Institute of Technology. Computational methods, acoustics, cavitation, shock dynamics, control theory.

    3. Farrukh Alvi, Florida State University. Experimental fluid mechanics, high speed jets, noise, micro-scale flow control.

    4. Nadine Aubry, Northeastern University. Microfluidics, electrohydrodynamics, particle manipulation and self-assembly.

    5. Sutanu Sarkar, University of California, San Diego. Turbulence, environmental flows, flow simulations.

    6. Neelesh Patankar, Northwestern University. Immersed boundary methods, non-newtonian flows, superhydrophobicity, aquatic locomotion.

    7. Jeff D. Eldredge, UCLA. Biological flows, acoustics, vortex dynamics.

    8. Andrea Prosperetti, Johns Hopkins University. Particle laden flows, multiphase flows, bubble dynamics.

    9. Sandip Ghosal, Northwestern University. Nanofluids, biological flows, electrokinetics.

    10. Roberto Verzicco, University of Rome, Tor Vergata LES. Thermal instabilities, vortex flows, computational methods.

    11. Ellen Longmire, University of Minnesota. Experimental fluid mechanics, multiphase flows, cardiovascular flows.

    12. Noel Clemens, University of Texas at Austin. Flow control, plasma actuators, high-speed flow experiments.

    13. Stephen B. Pope, Cornell University. Combustion, turbulence modeling.

    14. George Homsy, University of California, Santa Barbara. Porous media, surfactant fluid dynamics, interfaces, chaotic mixing.

  • 8

    Other Events

    Monday, 24 November (continued)

    Fluids Education Lunch Workshop: Simple In-Class Active Learning Activities12:50 13:50Marriott Marquis, Foothill G RoomSupported by: Army High Performance Computing Research Center Stanford UniversityOrganized by: Rachel Pepper ([email protected])(Free, Ticketed Event)TO REGISTER, GO TO: https://mmalouf.wufoo.com/forms/fluids-education-lunch-workshop-2014/

    This workshop will provide an opportunity for fluids edu-cators to discuss topics of mutual interest. Participants will have the chance to both share their successful techniques and learn from others during small group discussion at their tables. We will harvest Best of the Table highlights at the end of the lunch so that every-one in attendance comes away with something they can implement immediately in the classroom.

    Women in Fluids Networking Lunch12:50 13:50wichcraft: 868 Mission Street, Westfield CenterEstimated cost is $20Organized by: Margaret Byron ([email protected])(Registration Requested in Advance)TO REGISTER AND PREPAY, GO TO: http://www.tinyurl.com/DFDlunch Please register prior to November 16th.

    Join us for this networking lunch for female students, postdoctoral researchers and faculty. Estimated cost is $20. For late registration, please email [email protected] (note that late registration may not be possible).

    Meet the APS Journal Editors Reception17:30 19:00Convention Center, Level 3 - LobbyThe Editors of the APS journals invite you to join them for conversation and refreshments. The Editors will be available to answer questions, hear your ideas, and share concerns about the journals. All are welcome.

    Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Reception19:00 20:30Marriott Marquis, Mission Grille RoomSupported and Organized by: Woods Hole Oceanographic InstitutionAn open reception for alumni and friends of the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics (GFD) Program will be held on Monday, 24 November from 19:00 20:30 at the San Francisco Marriott Marquis in the Mission Grille room. The GFD program is an interdisciplinary summer program for graduate students that has been held since 1959 at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. It has promoted the exchange of ideas relating to fluid mechanics among many fields, such as oceanography, meteorology, astrophysics, geology, planetary atmo-spheres, and applied mathematics. Over its 56-year history, the GFD program has produced numerous alumni and touched many junior and senior scientists, and the purpose of the reception is to bring them together along with any other interested parties. Infor-mation on how to participate in the program will be provided.

  • 9

    Prizes, Awards and Fellowships

    Sunday, 23 November

    Welcome, Presentation of Awards and DFD FellowshipsSession B1.00001: 10:25Convention Center, Level 1 - HallChair: Nadine Aubry, Northeastern University

    Otto Laporte LectureSession B1.00002: 11:00Convention Center, Level 1 - HallChair: Moshe Matalon, Northwestern University

    2014 Fluid Dynamics Prize Recipient:Genevieve Comte-Bellot, Ecole Centrale de LyonTurbulence and Aeroacoustics

    Genevieve Comte-Bellot, Ecole Centrale de Lyon, is the recipient of the 2014 Fluid Dynamics Prize that recog-nizes major contributions to fundamental fluid dynamics made during a career of outstanding work. The citation reads: For significant contributions to understanding the physics of turbulent flow, aero-acoustics, and hot-wire anemometry by excellent measurements of mean and fluctuating properties.

    The Fluid Dynamics Prize was established in 1979 with support from the Office of Naval Research. In 2004, the Otto Laporte Award was combined with the Fluid Dynamics Prize so that the Division of Fluid Dynamics would have a single major prize the Fluid Dynamics Prize. The prize is now supported by the Division of Fluid Dynamics, Friends of Otto Laporte, and the American Institute of Physics journal, Physics of Fluids.

    In 2004, the DFD Executive Committee decided unanimously to call the lecture given by the Fluid Dynamics Prize recipient, the Otto Laporte Lecture. The rationale for this decision was to continue to honor the memory of one of the DFDs founding members, as was intended by those who originally funded the lectureship in his name. Also, this decision honors the many distinguished colleagues who were the Otto Laporte Lecturers in earlier years of the division, and the Otto Laporte Awardees after the lecture was made an APS Award in 1985.

    Stanley Corrsin Award LectureSession B1.00003: 11:45Convention Center, Level 1 - HallChair: Paul Steen, Cornell University

    2014 Stanley Corrsin Award Recipient:Eberhard Bodenschatz, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-OrganizationLagrangian Measurements in Turbulence: From Fundamentals to Applications

    Eberhard Bodenschatz of the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization is the fourth recipient of the Stanley Corrsin Award which recognizes and encourages a particularly influential contribution to fundamental fluid dynamics. The citation reads: For seminal contributions to experimental techniques that enabled quantitative Lagrangian measurements which opened a new subfield of turbulence research.

    The Stanley Corrsin Award is supported by an endow-ment fund contributed by the Division of Fluid Dynamics and held by the APS.

    Tuesday, 25 November

    Franois N. Frenkiel Award LectureSession P8: 11:10Convention Center, Room 3001/3003Chair: Sharath Girimaji, Texas A & M University

    2014 Franois N. Frenkiel Award Recipient:Benjamin D. Mater, Simon M. Schaad and Subhas Karan Venayagamoorthy, Colorado State UniversityRelevance of the Thorpe Length Scale in Stably Stratified Turbulence. Physics of Fluids volume 25, paper number 076604 (2013)

    Andreas Acrivos Dissertation Award LectureSession P14: 11:10Convention Center, Room 3009/3011Chair: Kausik Sarkar, George Washington University

    2014 Andreas Acrivos Dissertation Award Recipient:Eric Vandre, University of MinnesotaOnset of Dynamic Wetting Failure - The Mechanics of High-Speed Fluid Displacement

  • 10

    Prizes, Awards and Fellowships

    2014 FellowsShelley Anna, Carnegie Mellon UniversityFor contributions in extensional rheology and droplet micro fluidics and in particular for elucidating and manipulating the effect of surfactants in microfluidic tip streaming.

    Colm-Cille Caulfield, University of CambridgeFor fundamental advances in our understanding of the dynamics of stratified flows including finding new bounds on mixing efficiency and delineating new regimes in natural ventilation.

    Herman Clercx, Eindhoven UniversityFor his relevant contribution to our understanding of two-dimensional turbulence, vortex flow, rotating flow and mixing.

    John Dabiri, California Institute of TechnologyFor seminal contributions to vortex dynamics and biological propulsion, and for pioneering new concepts in wind energy.

    Karen Flack, US Naval AcademyFor her clarifying work on the structure of three- dimensional turbulent boundary layers, and for better characterizing the connections between surface rough-ness geometry and boundary layer drag.

    Ross Griffiths, Australian National UniversityFor pioneering experiments and theoretical analysis in geophysical fluid dynamics, including ocean modeling,earth mantle convection and lava flows, and for scientificleadership and service to the fluid dynamics community.

    Serafim Kalliadasis, Imperial College LondonFor pioneering and rigorous contributions to funda-mental fluid dynamics, particularly interfacial flows and dynamics of moving contact lines, statistical mechanics of inhomogeneous liquids, and coarse graining of complex multiscale systems.

    Sang Joon Lee, Pohang University of Science & TechnologyFor his contributions to experimental fluid mechanics, especially in the development of advanced flow visual-ization techniques and various successful applications to biofluid flows, microfluidics and turbulent shear flows.

    Ching-Long Lin, University of IowaFor contributions to multiscale flow physics and computa-tional techniques, including: pulmonary flows, imaging-based data-driven human lung models, lattice-Boltzmannmethods, coherent structures in atmospheric boundary layers, and four-dimensional data assimilation.

    Arne Pearlstein, University of Illinois, Urbana- ChampaignFor important fundamental contributions to the understanding of the stability of fluid motion, including computational studies of convection and solidification of binary and multi-component fluids.

    Andrew Pollard, Queens UniversityFor sustained and innovative contributions to compu-tational and experimental fluid dynamics and their symbiotic interplay, and exceptional contributions to higher education, including establishment and leader-ship of networks supporting international collaboration.

    Alain Pumir, Ecole Normale Superieure de LyonFor pioneering and lasting contributions to the selection of Saffman-Taylor fingering, elucidation of solitary wave origin in thin films, and theory of passive scalars and particle motion in turbulence.

    Kausik Sarkar, George Washington UniversityFor fundamental contributions and creative analysis of flows with droplets effects of viscoelasticity, emulsion rheology, normal stress differences, wall-induced migration, and modeling of encapsulated contrast microbubbles for ultrasound imaging.

    Michael Schultz, US Naval AcademyFor original and fundamental contributions to the understanding of wall-bounded turbulent flows including surface roughness effects, drag and economic conse-quences of biofouling, Reynolds-number scaling, and experiments utilizing advanced optical techniques.

    Zhen-Su She, Peking UniversityFor his contributions to the understanding of intermit-tency effects and non-Gaussian statistics of small-scale turbulent fluctuations, and quantification of the anoma-lous scaling of high-order velocity structure functions.

    Marc Smith, Georgia Institute of TechnologyFor fundamental contributions to the fields of interfacial fluid mechanics and heat transfer and to the moderni-zation of fluid mechanics education.

    Michael Triantafyllou, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyFor seminal contributions in developing scaling laws in fish-like swimming and pioneering the development of biomimetic robots to study mechanisms of unsteady flow control leading to fish and cetacean agility.

    Meng Wang, University of Notre DameFor pioneering work in large-eddy simulations for aeroacoustics, hydroacoustics and aero-optics, and contributions to the fundamental understanding of physical sources of sound and optical aberrations in turbulent flows.

    Z. Jane Wang, Cornell UniversityFor fundamental contributions to our understanding of insect flight through simulations of hovering, elucidation of unsteady forces, development of computational tools, and analyses of flight efficiency, stability, and control.

  • 11

    Invited Lectures, Minisymposia and Focus Sessions

    Invited LecturesThe 2014 annual meeting will feature the following eight invited lectures, each pair presented in two parallel ses-sions. Each invited lecture will be thirty minutes long, followed by five minutes for questions.

    Sunday, 23 November

    Invited Session C813:35, Convention Center, Room 3001/3003Chair: Mory Gharib, California Institute of TechnologyJean-Marc Chomaz, LADHYX, Ecole Polytechnique, ParisArt & Science Duality in Fluid Mechanics

    Invited Session C1413:35, Convention Center, Room: 3009/3011Chair: Parviz Moin, Stanford UniversityThierry Poinsot, CERFACS, ToulouseControl and Simulation of Thermoacoustic Instabilities

    Monday, 24 November

    Invited Session J814:00, Convention Center, Room 3001/3003Chair: John Hinch, University of CambridgeHoward A. Stone, Princeton UniversityLife on a Surface in a Low-Reynolds Number Flow

    Invited Session J1414:00, Convention Center, Room 3009/3011Chair: Philip Marcus, University of California, BerkeleyAnn Almgren, Lawrence Berkeley National LaboratoryLow Mach Number Modeling of Stratified Flows

    Invited Session K814:40, Convention Center, Room 3001/3003Chair: Jonathan Freund, University of IlinioisTim Colonius, California Institute of TechnologyCavitation in Ultrasound and Shockwave Therapy

    Invited Session K1414:40, Convention Center, Room 3009/3011Chair: Jeffrey Koseff, Stanford UniversityThomas Peacock, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyIn Pursuit of Internal Waves

    Tuesday, 25 November

    Invited Session N810:30, Convention Center, Room 3001/3003Chair: Peter Schmid, Imperial College, LondonViswanathan Kumaran, Indian Institute of Science, BangaloreTransition to Turbulence in a Soft-Walled Microchannel

    Invited Session N1410:30, Convention Center, Room 3009/3011Chair: Stephen Monismith, Stanford UniversityFotis Sotiropoulos, University of MinnesotaSand Waves in Environmental Flows Insights Gained by LES

    MinisymposiaThe 2014 annual meeting will feature the following mini-symposia, each one consisting of talks that are twice as long as regular contributed talks.

    Monday, 24 November

    Minisymposium I: Session L915:35 17:45Convention Center, Room 3014/3016Frontiers of Computational Science in Transport PhenomenaChair: Gianluca Iaccarino, Stanford University

    Minisymposium II: Session L1515:35 17:45Convention Center, Room 3022/3024Honoring the Memory of Professor Howard BrennerChair: Anthony Davis, University of California, San Diego

  • 12

    Focus SessionsThis years program includes Focus Sessions on three topics. Each topic has two sessions to accommodate the abstracts received. Unlike Minisymposia, they consist of presentations of normal length, only some of which are solicited by the organizers.

    Sunday, 23 November

    Focus Session: Session D914:15 16:25Convention Center, Room 3014/3016The Impact of Andy Acrivos on Todays Fluid Mechanics Science IChair: Eric Shaqfeh, Stanford University

    Focus Session: Session D1514:15 16:25Convention Center, Room 3022/3024Respiratory Bio-Fluid Dynamics IChair: James Grotberg, University of Michigan

    Focus Session: Session E916:45 18:03Convention Center, Room 3014/3016The Impact of Andy Acrivos on Todays Fluid Mechanics Science IIChair: Gary Leal, University of California, Santa Barbara

    Invited Lectures, Minisymposia and Focus Sessions

    Focus Session: Session E1516:45 18:03Convention Center, Room 3022/3024Respiratory Bio-Fluid Dynamics IIJosue Sznitman, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology

    Monday, 24 November

    Focus Session: Session G808:00 10:10Convention Center, Room 3001/3003Superhydrophobicity and Drag Reduction IChair: Gareth McKinley, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Focus Session: Session H810:30 12:40Convention Center, Room 3001/3003Superhydrophobicity and Drag Reduction IIChair: Steven Ceccio, University of Michigan

  • 13

    Instructions to Speakers, Session Chairs and All Poster Presenters1. Speakers should arrive at least 10 minutes prior to the start of the session and introduce themselves to the

    Session Chair.

    2. A cable TV monitor in each room will be used to time the sessions. This timing will be strictly enforced by the Session Chair.

    3. Contributed papers are limited to 10 minutes with 2 additional minutes for discussion. This is followed by 1 minute for transition to the next paper and introduction of the next speaker. During the talk, the monitor will indicate at 8 minutes that the speaker has to finish in 2 minutes. At 10 minutes, it will indicate that the speakers presentation time is over. At 12 minutes, it will indicate that transition to the next speaker must occur.

    4. A minisymposium paper is 26 minutes long, including questions and transition. This makes a minisymposium paper twice as long as a regular contributed paper, allowing attendees to move between regular talks and minisymposia. Minisymposium talks will be 20 22 minutes long with 5 3 minutes for discussion and 1 minute for transition. However, note that the time monitor in the room will keep the regular 13 minute schedule.

    5. The Otto Laporte and Stanley Corrsin Lectures are 40 minutes with 5 additional minutes for discussion (total 45 minutes). Invited lectures are 30 minutes long with an additional 5 minutes for discussion (total 35 minutes). The Andreas Acrivos Dissertation Award Lecture and Franois Frenkiel Award Lectures are 17 minutes with 3 additional minutes for discussion (total 20 minutes).

    6. Each presentation room is equipped with an LCD projector, screen, lavalier microphone and pointer. Speakers must provide their own laptop computer. Macintosh users should provide their own adaptor to connect their laptop to the projector. Speakers are responsible for procurement and cost of renting any additional AV equipment. Also note that the APS is not responsible for the security of any personal computers.

    7. There is very little time to recover from an AV malfunction, should one occur. Please check for the following common reasons for malfunctions before your presentation:

    Meeting room projectors will have 1024 by 768 resolution. Please set your laptop resolutions to 1024 by 768 or lower. Your images will not display properly if your laptop resolution is higher than the projectors.

    Set the power profile, monitor profile and screensaver on your laptop to turn off the sleep/hibernate mode. Your laptop will usually revert to its default resolution if it goes into sleep/hibernate mode.

    Animations and equations in PowerPoint are not necessarily compatible across different versions. If you load your presentation on to a different computer, please check that it displays correctly.

    Show up ten minutes before the session starts, and ask the student volunteer in the room to connect your laptop to the six-way switch; do not do so by yourself.

    Macintosh users should bring their own adaptor to connect their laptop to the projector. A Speaker Ready Room staffed by technicians is provided for your use. Please test your presen-

    tations and confirm your laptop settings in the Speaker Ready Room prior to your talk.

    Please Note: Speaker Ready Room is located in the Convention Center, Level 2 - Alcove F.

  • 14

    Instructions to Speakers, Session Chairs and All Poster Presenters (continued)Additional Notes to Session Chairs:1. Please be on time. Arrive in the presentation room at least 10 minutes prior to the session start time. Just before

    the session begins, briefly introduce yourself and explain the timing system to the audience.

    2. Start the session on time. Announce the first abstract and author when the monitor timing system signals the beginning of the talk.

    3. Strictly adhere to the timing signals. The purpose of these timing signals is to allow attendees to move from one session to another and to be able to rely on the exact time of each presentation as listed in the program. Speakers must be asked to stop when their allotted time is up.

    4. Please check the Corrigenda and program agenda for your session. If a presentation has been withdrawn or should a speaker fail to appear, allow the preceding discussion to continue, or suspend the session until it is time for the next scheduled abstract. You may allow a speaker who misses his scheduled time to speak at the end of the session if time allows.

    5. All meeting rooms will have a student volunteer to assist you with running the session.

    Instructions for All Poster Session Set upsGallery of Fluid Motion Posters, F1: Poster Session and F2: Student Poster Competition

    Set-up: Please note there are different set up locations depending on your poster category. Poster Session F1: Poster Session: Set up in the Convention Center, Level 2 - Lobby Poster Session F2: Student Poster Competition: Set up in the Convention Center, Level 3 -

    Lobby Gallery of Fluid Motion Posters: Set up in the Convention Center, Level 3 - Lobby Please place your poster in the correct poster session location as indicated above.

    Boards will be in place and numbered by 13:00 on Saturday. Entries may be put up between 13:00 and 20:00 on Saturday evening, 22 November, or between 07:00 and 09:00 on Sunday, 23 November.

    Entries are to be mounted in the numbered space that has been reserved for it.

    Refer to the poster listing for poster number and correct poster display location.

    Velcro and pushpins will be provided. Presenters must bring any other supplies needed to mount their posters.

    Poster boards (a little less than one-half of an 8-foot long x 4-foot high poster board for each entry i.e., 45 x 45) will be available for mounting.

    Presentation: Poster authors must be by their board for the sessions F1 and F2 on Sunday, 23 November from 18:15 19:00.

    Dismantling: Presenters must dismantle their posters by noon on Tuesday, 25 November. After that they will be discarded.

  • 15

    Gallery of Fluid Motion

    Gallery of Fluid Motion HoursSunday, 23 November 07:00 17:00 and 18:15 19:00Monday, 24 November 07:30 17:00Tuesday, 25 November 07:30 11:30Convention Center, Level 3 - LobbyGallery of Fluid Motion Videos: Supported by Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering/ Environmental Fluid Mechanics Lab Stanford UniversityOrganized by: Jeffrey Koseff, Stanford University and Godfrey Mungal, Santa Clara UniversityThe 32nd Annual Gallery of Fluid Motion consists of computational and experimental still images (posters) and videos submitted by attendees. A panel selects outstanding entries based on artistic value, scientific content, and originality. The winning entries will be displayed at the Annual APS Meeting in March 2015 and will appear in Physics of Fluids, September 2015.

    The award-winning entries will be announced at 15:25 on Monday, 24 November, immediately after the invited lectures, on Level 3 by the Gallery of Fluid Motion Video display.

    Videos are assigned a number at the time of submission.A skip in the sequential numbering indicates that a poster or video has been withdrawn prior to publication.

    PostersP0001. Motion of inertial particles in chaotic flow

    Steven Wang, Robert Stewart, Guy Metcalf, Jie Wu, CSIRO, Australia

    P0002. Fracking jello Ching-Yao Lai, Jason Wexler, Howard Stone, Princeton University

    P0003. Flow visualizations of a zero-pressure-gradient turbulent boundary layer on a flat plate Bryan Kaiser, Svetlana Poroseva, University of New Mexico

    P0004. Cylinder in the vicinity of a bluff body leading edge Theodoros Michelis, Marios Kotsonis, Delft University of Technology

    P0005. Shallow fluids meet Einstein Jean-Luc Thiffeault, Jay Johnson, University of Wisconsin - Madison

    P0006. Taylors Forest Gregoire Lemoult, Philipp Maier, Bjorn Hof, IST, Austria

    P0007. Soap film visualization of 2D vortex shedding in VAWTs Daniel Araya, John Dabiri, California Institute of Technology

    P0008. Transition of a turbulent boundary layer from smooth to rough surface Jae Hwa Lee, Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST)

    P0009. From dry to wet granular material Alban Sauret, Princeton University; Sylvain Viroulet, University of Manchester, UK; Olivier Kimmoun, Christian Kharif, IRPHE - Aix Marseille University, CNRS & Centrale Marseille, France

    P0010. Vortex rings in non-Newtonian viscoelastic fluids play yo-yo Julie Albagnac, David Laupsien, Anne-Archard, Institut de Macanique des Fluides de Toulouse, France

    P0011. Webbed jets Baptiste Nacel, Henri Lhuissier, Laurent Limat, MSC, Universitet Paris Diderot, France

    P0012. Snow squall over Canadian rural road, revealing boundary layer streaks Xiaohua Wu, Royal Military College of Canada

    P0013. On the physics of fizzing Elisabeth Ghabache, Arnaud Antkowiak, Christophe Josserand, Thomas Sacon, CNRS & UPMC - Institut d'Alembert, France

    P0014. The lions of the Piazza del Popolo Emmanuel Villermaux, Aix-Marseille University, France

    P0015. Variable-density turbulent mixing in the presence and absence of a constant acceleration field Pooya Movahed, Eric Johnsen, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor

    P0016. Spray formation of a gel using impinging jets Neil S. Rodrigues, Jian Gao, Jun Chen, Paul E. Sojka, Maurice J. Zucrow Laboratories, Purdue University

  • 16

    Gallery of Fluid Motion

    P0017. Purposely porpoising penguins Alexandra Techet, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    P0018. Vortex dipole impacting a deformable plate Eugene Zivkov, Sean D. Peterson, Serhiy Yarusevych, University of Waterloo

    P0019. Cilia-powered particle streaming Janna Nawroth, Harvard University; Margaret McFall-Ngai, University of Wisconsin at Madison; Eva Kanso, University of Southern California; John Dabiri, California Institute of Technology

    P0020. Sizzling droplets: Heated superhydrophobic surface impingement Cristian Clavijo, Matthew Searle, Daniel Maynes, Julie Crockett, Tadd Truscott, Brigham Young University

    P0021. Effectiveness of drag reduction deflectors on light vehicle trailer systems Royce Boyer, Lorenz Sigurdson, Vortex Fluid Dynamics Lab, Mechanical Engineering Department, University of Alberta

    P0022. Quantitative visualization of mud flow during the drilling process using ultrasound speckle velocimetry Seong-jun Kim, Hyoung-Bum Kim, Gyeongsang National University, Korea

    P0027. Photogenic fluids I: Soap bubbles in thin enclosures Said Shakerin, University of the Pacific

    P0028. Photogenic fluids II: Patterns in sand box Said Shakerin, University of the Pacific

    P0029. Photogenic fluids III: Cornstarch as canvas Said Shakerin, University of the Pacific

    P0030. Photogenic fluids IV: Drops and tilt painting Said Shakerin, University of the Pacific

    P0031. Flows around millimeter-sized plankton Navish Wadhwa, Anders Andersen, Thomas Kiorboe, Technical University of Denmark

    P0032. Shock focusing in a gaseous lens Patrick Wayne, Dell Olmstead, C. Randall Truman, PeteRVorobieff, The University of New Mexico

    P0033. Dynamical patterns in Faraday waves Lyes Kahouadji, PMMH-CNRS-ESPCI, France; Nicolas Perinet, Universidad de Chile; Laurette Tuckerman, PMMH-CNRS-ESPCI, France; Jalel Chergui, Damir Juric, LIMSI-CNRS, France; Seungwon Shin, Hongik University, South Korea

    P0034. The many faces of a Leidenfrost drop Xiaolei Ma, Juan-Jose Lietor-Santos, Justin Burton, Emory University

    P0035. Rain and clouds Eberhard Bodenschatz, Florian Winkel, Holger Nobach, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Germany

    P0036. Cellular two-dimensional flames Christophe, Almarcha, Joel Quinard, Bruno Denet, Elias Al-Sarraf, Jean-Marie Laugier, Emmanuel Villermaux, Aix Marseille Universite, France

    P0037. Varying viscosity droplet impingement Tate Fanning, Philip Kinghorn, Brigham Young University

    P0038. Star trails in evaporating droplets Susmita Dash, Aditya Chandramohan, Justin Weibel, Suresh Garimella, Purdue University

    P0039. Multiscale simulation of red blood cell tethering in a capillary Zhangli Peng, University of Notre Dame; Xuejin Li, George Karniadakis, Brown University; Ming Dao, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    P0040. Wipping motion of Taylor cones on W/O interfaces Behnam Sadri, University of Alberta; Pejman Tabatabaei-Hosseini, Tabriz University; Babak Vajdi Hokmabad, University of Alberta; Esmaeil Esmaeilzadeh, Tabriz University, Iran

    P0041. Flow pattern from jet impingement Hamid Ait Abderrahmane, Aslan Kasimov, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Saudi Arabia

    P0042. Boundary layer separations in a multistage axial compressor Natalie R. Smith, Nicole L. Key, Purdue University

    P0043. Reshaping drop bouncing Kyle Hounsell, Adam Paxson, James Bales, MIT; James Bird, Boston University; Kripa Varanasi, MIT

    P0044. Wake structure of a flapping wing Oscar Curet, Florida Atlantic University; Daniel Bissell, TSI

    P0046. Unsteady temperature measurement of sparkling fireworks Chihiro Inoue, The University of Tokyo, Japan

    P0047. Meandering fingers: growth, evolution and decay of convective instabilities within unstable fluid layers Dana Ehyaei, Ken Kiger, University of Maryland

  • 17

    Gallery of Fluid Motion

    P0048. Cavitation changes splash into crown Akihito Kiyama, Yoshiyuki Tagawa, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Japan

    P0049. Highly sophisticated compound droplets on fiber arrays Floriane Weyer, Marjorie Lismont, Laurent Dreesen, Nicolas Vandewalle, GRASP - University of Liege, Belgium

    P0050. Parallel simulation of droplet splash Jalel Chergui, LIMSI - CNRS; Seungwon Shin, Hongik University, South Korea; Damir Juric, LIMSI - CNRS, France

    P0051. VIV in 60 seconds Banafsheh Seyed-Aghazadeh, Pariya Pourazarm, Yahya Modarres-Sadeghi, University of Massachusetts

    P0052. Antisymmetric cavity formation Jeremy Ellis, Zach Smith, Tadd Truscott, Brigham Young University

    P0053. Its a trap!: Oil stays behind when water wicks Peter Walls, James Bird, Boston UniversityP0054. Dripping like pollock

    Bernado Palacios, Sandra Zetina, Roberto Zenit, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico

    P0055. Fingers and toes in miscible flow instabilities Irmgard Bischofberger, Radha Ramachandran, Sidney R. Nagel, University of Chicago

    P0056. The new ball and chain Alexander Cali, Verona High School; Kofi James, College of St. Elizabeth; Joshua Kilian-Meneghin, A. David Trubatch, Montclair State University; Philip Yecko, The Cooper Union

    P0057. Steering and maneuvering in jellyfish bells Alexander Hoover, Laura Miller, Boyce Griffith, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

    P0058. Spark induced cavitation Jonathon Pendlebury, Randy Hurd, Zhao Pan, Tate Fanning, Alex Jafek, Tadd Truscott, Brigham Young University

    P0059. Unsteady wake of an oscillating disk Natalie Agre, Jun Zhang, Leif Ristroph, New York University

    P0060. Matryoshka cavity Tate Fanning, Chris Mabey, Kyle Bodily, Randy Hurd, Zhao Pan, Madison Boyer, Brigham Young University

    P0061. Experiments with heavy particles in a viscous fluid: Amazing oscillations Jakub Nowakowski, Maria L. Ekiel-Jezewska; Institute of Fundamental Technological Research, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland

    P0062. Fluid dynamics of jellyfish turning Laura Miller, Alex Hoover, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

    P0063. Characteristic structure of forced wetting Mengfei He, University of Chicago

    P0064. Transition to turbulence in curved pipe Amirreza Hashemi, Francis Loth, University of Akron

    P0065. Bubble ball-kicker Will Crowe, Virginia Tech; Gabriel Guenoun, ENS Cachan, UPMC; Sean Gart, Sunghwan Jung, Virginia Tech

    P0066. Evolution of a vortex dipole and its associ-ated spanwise vortex in a periodic flow Erick Javier Lopez-Sanchez, Gerardo Ruiz-Chavarria, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico

    P0067. Jet impingement within a collapsing bubble Outi Supponen, Philippe Kobel, Mohamed Farhat, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Switzerland

    P0068. Walking in color Daniel M. Harris, John W. M. Bush, MIT

    P0069. Interference fringes from blow-off apparatus Charles Tschirhart, Sandra Troian, California

    Institute of Technology

    P0070. More spin, less twist: The dance of flexible hoses Mitchell Canham, David Nobes, Vakhtang Putkaradze, University of Alberta

    P0071. Clogging cascade Emilie Dressaire, NYU Polytechnic School of

    Engineering; Alban Sauret, Princeton University; Emmanuel Villermaux IRPHE, Aix-Marseille

    University; Howard Stone, Princeton University

    P0072. Flow topologies and turbulence scales in a jet in cross flow Anthony Ruiz, Guilhem Lacaze, Joseph Oefelein, Sandia National Laboratories

    P0073. Creating a colorful braid Margaux Filippi, Severine Atis, Thomas Peacock, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • 18

    Gallery of Fluid Motion

    P0074. Coherent structures in separation bubbles Andrew R. Lambert, Thomas M. Kirk, Serhiy Yarusevych, University of Waterloo

    P0075. Drop vortex migration Ernesto Mancilla, Roberto Zenit, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico

    VideosGallery of Fluid Motion Videos: Supported by Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering/Environmental Fluid Mechanics Lab Stanford University

    Videos are assigned a number at the time of submission.A skip in the sequential numbering indicates that a poster or video has been withdrawn prior to publication.

    V005. Sand waves in turbulent flows Ali Khosronejad, Konstantinos Kochilas, Fotis Sotiropoulos, University of Minnesota

    V006. Schlieren imaging of 3-D effects during viscous fingering of water flowing into glycerol Patrick Bunton, Simone Stewart, Gabrielle Brooks, William Jewell College; Anne De Wit, Universit Libre de Bruxelles

    V009. Music of falling paper Z. Jane Wang, Cornell University

    V010. Crown propagation dynamics induced by high frequency droplet impingements Taolue Zhang, Jorge Alvarado, Texas A&M University

    V011. Submerged laminar jet impingement: A textbook case for vortex-wall interaction influencing heat transfer Wilko Rohlfs, Claas Ehrenpreis, Jrg Johannes, Reinhold Kneer, RWTH Aachen University

    V012. The hidden complexities of the simple match Victor Miller, Matthew Tilghman, Ronald

    Hanson, Stanford University

    V013. High resolution simulation of Karman vortex street in flow past a cylinder: 2D David Trebotich, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

    V015. Raindrop impact on a sandy surface Xiang Cheng, Runchen Zhao, Qianyun Zhang, Hendro Tjugito, University of Minnesota

    V016. Laser impact on a drop Alexander L. Klein, Claas Willem Visser, Wilco Bouwhuis, University of Twente; Henri Lhuissier, Universit Paris Diderot; Chao Sun, Jacco H. Snoeijer, University of Twente; Emmanuel Villermaux, Aix-Marseille Universit; Detlef Lohse, University of Twente

    V017. Liquid film motor Reza Shirsavar, University of Zanjan; Ahmad Amjadi, Sharif University of Technology; Mohammad Shirsavar Sampad-Beheshti, University of Zanjan; Mansoure Moeini Rizi, Sharif University of Technology

    V019. Starting process for a hemispherical shell with a central circular vent Ryan McMullen, Beverley McKeon, California Institute of Technology; Clara OFarrell, Jet Propulsion Laboratory

    V020. Turbulence-enhanced melting of an ice-water interface Thomas Keitzl, Juan-Pedro Mellado, Dirk Notz, Max Planck Institute for Meteorology

    V021. Leidenfrost state of a drop above a heated liquid pool: Mass entrainment & emulsification Mathias Dietzel, Saman Afkhami Meibodi, Steffen Hardt, TU Darmstadt

    V022. Salt fingers in double diffusive convection bounded by two parallel plates Yantao Yang, Erwin P. van der Poel, Rodolfo Ostilla-Monico, Chao Sun, University of Twente; Roberto Verzicco, University of Rome Tor Vergata; Siegfried Grossmann, Philipps-Universitt Marburg; Detlef Lohse, University of Twente

    V023. Chaotic dynamics during solvent shifting from a liquid jet Ramin Hajian, Steffen Hardt, Technical University of Darmstadt

    V024. Doubly spiraled supersonic jet Kholmurad Khasanov, Lomonosov Moscow State University

    V025. Shock - acceleration of a pair of gas inhomogeneities Gandhari Wattal, Sebastian Heinz, University of Wisconsin - Madison

    V026. Vortex ring impacts on (free) surfaces Adrien Benusiglio, cole Polytechnique; David Qur, ESPCI Paris; Christophe Clanet, cole Polytechnique

    V028. Fractal-generated axisymmetric wakes Thibault Dairay, Martin Obligado, John Christos Vassilicos, Imperial College London

  • 19

    Gallery of Fluid Motion

    V029. Dynamical patterns in Faraday waves Lyes Kahouadji, PMMH-CNRS-ESPCI; Nicolas Prinet, Universidad de Chile; Laurette Tuckerman, PMMH-CNRS-ESPCI; Jalel Chergui, Damir Juric, LIMSI-CNRS; Seungwon Shin, Hongik University

    V030. Computational investigation of fountain flows Leandre Berard, Mehdi Raessi, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

    V031. Rain and clouds Eberhard Bodenschatz, Florian Winkel, Holger Nobach, Alexei Krekhov, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization

    V032. Chain separation bubbles James Hanna, Wesley Royston, Rick Warner, Virginia Tech

    V033. Visualization of currents inside an oscillating water drop Gerardo Rangel Paredes, David Porta Zepeda, Carlos Echeverria Arjonilla, Catalina Stern, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico (UNAM)

    V034. Shadowgraph of a miscible drop falling in a stratified fluid Angelica Zarazua Cruz, Carlos Echeverria Arjonila, David Porta Zepeda, Catalina Stern, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico (UNAM)

    V035. Visualization of shock waves emitted from a trumpet bell and their interaction with several objects Carlos Echeverria Arjonilla, David Porta Zepeda, Roberto Velasco Segura, Teo Vzquez, Pablo Rendon, Antonio Perez Lopez, Catalina Stern, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico (UNAM)

    V036. Near wall turbulence structures under the effect of tuned wall-impedance Julien Bodart, Universit de Toulouse, ISAE; Carlo Scalo, Purdue University; Sanjiva Lele, Stanford University

    V037. Self-crumpling elastomers: bending induced by the drying stimulus of a nanoparticle

    suspension Franois Boulogne, Howard Stone, Princeton University

    V038. Faraday instability in floating drops Giuseppe Pucci, Universit Paris Diderot; Martine Ben Amar, Ecole Normale Suprieure, Universit Paris Diderot; Yves Couder, Universit Paris Diderot

    V039. Fluid jet guiding Baptiste Darbois Texier, Laurent Maquet, Stphane Dorbolo, University of Liege

    V040. Transmigration of a red blood cell through an interendothelial slit in the human spleen Zhangli Peng, University of Notre Dame; Igor Pivkin, University of Lugano; George Karniadakis, Brown University; Ming Dao, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    V041. Dynamic behavior of two water droplets impinged onto hot surface Choong Hyun Lee, Kyung Chun Kim, Pusan National University

    V042. Radial jetting during the impact of compound drops

    Jiaming Zhang, Erqiang Li, Sigurdur Thoroddsen, King Abdullah University of Science and

    Technology (KAUST)

    V043. Ferromagnetic disc in a nematic liquid crystal under the action of a magnetic field Alena Antipova, Colin Denniston, University of Western Ontario

    V044. Impinging of two opposed inclined electrified laminar jets in the stagnant dielectric medium Behnam Sadri, University of Alberta; Pejman Tabatabaei-Hosseini, Esmaeil Esmaeilzadeh, University of Tabriz

    V045. Electrohydrodynamics of a particle-covered drop Malika Ouriemi, Petia Vlahovska, Brown University

    V046. Interface tracking simulation of a single bubble in fully resolved turbulent flow Aaron Thomas, Jinyong Feng, Igor Bolotnov, North Carolina State University

    V047. Breaking droplets: Superhydrophobic surface breakup Jonathan Stoddard, Allison Lee, Tadd Truscott, Julie Crockett, Daniel Maynes, Brigham Young University

    V048. Drop to particle impact in mid-air. What happens after collision? Vitaliy Sechenyh, Alidad Amirfazli, Sayed Hossein Banitabaei, Mina Karimi, STANTEC Inc., Edmonton, Alberta

    V049. Deadly swim of Cercariae Manu Prakash, Deepak Krishnamurthy, Stanford University

  • 20

    Gallery of Fluid Motion

    V050. Volumetric PIV behind a flapping wing Oscar Curet, Cyndee Finkel, Karl von Ellenrieder, Florida Atlantic University; Daniel Bissell, TSI

    V051. Turbulent transport in the wakes of wind turbines Sarah Aguasvivas Manzano, Pankaj K. Jha, Joseph A. Plummer, The Pennsylvania State University; Earl P. N. Duque, Intelligent Light; Sven Schmitz, The Pennsylvania State University

    V052. Why beer does not spill: Foam damps sloshing Alban Sauret, Francois Boulogne, Jean Cappello, Princeton University; Emilie Dressaire, NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering; Howard Stone, Princeton University

    V053. Spin of a giant multinucleate zoospore Javier Urzay, Stanford University; Donald Ott, University of Akorn; Manu Prakash, Stanford University

    V054. Spatially developing turbulent boundary layer: The return of the plate JungHoon Lee, Jason Monty, Nicholas Hutchins, The University of Melbourne

    V055. Visualization of heated coaxial jet flow and its noise radiation Michael Gloor, Leonhard Kleiser, ETH Zurich; Jean M. Favra, CSCS Swiss National Supercomputing Centre

    V056. Steady drop levitation Masafumi Saito, Yoshiyuki Tagawa, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology; Henri Lhuissier, CNRS and Universit Paris Didero

    V058. Simulations of collapsing vapor bubbles Babak Hejazialhosseini, Diego Rossinelli, Petros Koumoutsakos, ETH Zrich

    V059. VIV in 60 seconds Banafsheh Seyed-Aghazadeh, Pariya Pourazarm, Yahya Modarres-Sadeghi, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

    V061. Boundary layer and recirculation of flow around a vertical cylindical surface at Reynolds number of 1230 Alberto Cervantes, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo; Martin Herrejon, Instituto Tecnologico de Morelia; Gildardo Solorio, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo; Hector Javier, Vergara Instituto Tecnologico de Morelia; Alicia Aguilar, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo; Jos Roberto Zenit, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico

    V062. Natural convection film boiling over a vertical cylinder Alberto Cervantes, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo; Martin Herrejon, Instituto Tecnologico de Morelia; Gildardo Solorio, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo; Hector Javier, Vergara Instituto Tecnologico de Morelia; Alicia Aguilar, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo; Jos Roberto Zenit, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico

    V064. Collapsing time and space: Coalescence of conical droplet pairs Casey Bartlett, Boston University

    V066. Yield stress fluids impacting heated surfaces Brendan Blackwell, Athrey Nadhan, Alex Wu,

    Randy Ewoldt, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

    V069. Spatiotemporal dynamics of surfactant monolayers on Faraday waves Stephen Strickland, Michael Shearer, Karen Daniels, North Carolina State University

    V070. Dispersion of an oil slick by breaking waves Cheng Li, Devin Conley, Joseph Katz, Johns Hopkins University

    V071. Leading edge vortex formation in aquatic swimming Mohsen Daghooghi, Iman Borazjani, University at Buffalo SUNY

    V072. Fluid flow visualization through a geometrically complex hydrogel obstruction Joel Weitzman, Jeffrey Koseff, Stanford University

    V073. Buckling instability of crown sealing Jeremy Marston, Texas Tech University

    V074. Large eddy simulations of marine atmospheric boundary layers Peter Sullivan, Scott Pearse, Alan Norton, National Center for Atmospheric Research

    V077. Why do undulatory swimmers get attracted to surfaces? Jinzhou Yuan, Haim Bau, University of Pennsylvania

    V078. Why do undulatory swimmers go against the flow? Jinzhou Yuan, Haim Bau, University of Pennsylvania

    V079. How a polymer escapes its solvent? Sam Dehaeck, Pierre Colinet, Benoit Scheid, Universit Libre de Bruxelles

  • 21

    Gallery of Fluid Motion

    V080. Relaxation of an elastic filament on a viscous interface Joel Marthelot, S. Ganga Prasath, Rama Govindarajan, Narayanan Menon, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Hyderabad

    V081. The pearls of Mezcal Monica Martinez-Ortiz, California Institute of Technology; Federico Hernandez-Sanchez, University of Twente; Roberto Zenit, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico

    V082. Wakes awakening: Start-up and symmetry breaking of flow past multiple flat plates Scott T. M. Dawson, Clarence W. Rowley, Princeton University

    V083. Lets light this candle: Multimodality imaging of hybrid rocket combustion Elizabeth Jens, Victor Miller, Flora Mechentel, Brian Cantwell, Stanford University

    V084. The splash within a collapsing cavitation bubble Outi Supponen, Philippe Kobel, Mohamed Farhat, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne

    V085. Mid-air recovery of falling dragonflies James Melfi, Cornell University; Anthony Leonardo, HHMI Janelia Farms, Z. Jane Wang, Cornell University

    V087. The effect of obstacle wakes on reaction enhancement between two initially distant scalars Farrokh Shoaei, Michael Soltys, Aaron True, John Crimaldi, University of Colorado Boulder

    V090. Shades of sulfur Gabriela Bran Anleu, Hamarz Aryafar, Pirouz Kavehpour, University of California, Los Angeles

    V091. Wrapping a drop with a flat sheet Joseph D. Paulsen, Vincent Dmery, Benny Davidovitch, Chris Santangelo, Thomas P. Russell, Narayanan Menon, University of Massachusetts Amherst

    V092. Lapping in the matrix Sean Gart, Sunghwan Jung, Virginia Tech

    V094. The life and times of big and small bubbles Navdeep Singh Dhillon, Jacopo Buongiorno, Kripa Varanasi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    V095. Electrified amoebas in boiling water Navdeep Singh Dhillon, Seyed Reza Mahmoudi, Kripa Varanasi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    V096. Water entry by a train of droplets Chon U. Chan, Xin Huang, Nanyang Technological University; Philipp Frommhold, University of Gttingen; Alexander Lippert, LAM Research AG, Austria; Claus-Dieter Ohl, Nanyang Technological University

  • 22

    Exhibits

    Exhibit HoursSunday, 23 November 07:00 17:00 and 18:15 19:00Monday, 24 November 07:30 17:00Tuesday, 25 November 07:30 11:30Convention Center, Level 2 - Lobby

    Cambridge University Press32 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, NY 10013Tel: 212-924-3900Fax: 212-691-3239Web: www.cambridge.org/usEmail: [email protected]

    Cambridges publishing in books and journals combinesstate-of-the-art content with the highest standards of scholarship, writing and production. Visit our booth to browse new titles, available at a 20% discount, and to pick up sample issues of our journals. Visit our website to see everything we do: www.cambridge.org/us/.

    Dantec Dynamics750 Blue Point RoadHoltsville, NY 11742Tel: 631-654-1290Fax: 631-654-1293Web: www.dantecdynamics.comEmail: [email protected]

    Dantec Dynamics is a leading developer and supplier of integrated measurement systems for diagnostics and research into fluid mechanics, solid mechanics, micro-fluidics, spray analysis and combustion technology. Our systems are used to obtain measurement data of physical properties in air, gases, liquids and solid materials. Quantitative measurement data include velocity, turbulence, particle size, concentration, temperature, combus tion species, strain/stress and vibration. Dantec Dynamics has several thousand mea-surement systems in oper a tion at leading universities and industrial companies around the world. Our more than 60 years in operation along with the continuous feedback we receive from our customers allows us to continually innovate and improve product performance.

    Ditect CorporationPO Box 2516Saratoga, CA 95070 USATel: 408-317-8277Web: www.ditect-corp.comEmail: [email protected]

    Ditect Corporation was founded in 1991 in Tokyo, Japan.We started our business manufacturing frame grabbing boards for MS-DOS, PC-9801, and DOS/V PC. As timepassed, we moved on to create motion capture software,PIV software, high speed camera, eye tracking systems,sperm analyzers, and golf analyzers. Now we are a unique company specializing in image processing taking advantage of both software and hardware. Flownizer (2D2C and 2D3C PIV) is a simple direct cross-correlation, high accuracy, and fast operation software with non-FFT and ensemble correlation, with CBC methods.

    Air Force Research LaboratoryAir Force Office of Scientific Research875 N. Randolph Avenue, Suite 325Arlington, VA 22203Tel: 703-696-7310Fax: 703-696-5233Web: www.wpafb.af.mil/afrlEmail: [email protected]

    The Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) is the Air Forces only organization wholly dedicated to leading the dis covery, development and integration of war-fighting tech nologies for our air, space and cyberspace forces. AFRL traces its roots to the vision of airpower pioneers who understood science as key to air supremacy. As a vi tal component of AFRL, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) focuses on foundational knowledge: discovering, shaping and championing basic science that profoundly impacts the future Air Force. AFOSRs technical experts foster and fund research within the AFRL, and with universities, industry and other federal agencies to ensure the transition of research results to support U.S. Air Force needs. AFOSR interacts with leading scientists and engineers throughout the world to identify breakthrough opportunities; and actively manages a portfolio en-compassing the best of these opportunities. As the single manager for basic research within the Air Force, AFOSR focuses on research areas offering significant and comprehensive benefits to our national warfighting and peacekeeping capabilities.

    American Physical Society1 Physics EllipseCollege Park, MD 20740Tel: 301-209-3200Fax: 301-209-0865Web: www.aps.org

    Founded in 1899, the American Physical Society (APS) is a non-profit membership organization working to advance and diffuse the knowledge of physics. APS pub lishes the world's most widely read physics re-search and review journals: Physical Review Letters, Reviews of Modern Physics, Physical Review A-E, Physical Review X, Physical Review Applied, Physical Review Special Topics, and Physics. Please stop by our booth to learn more about the prestigious Physical Review collection and sign up for an extended trial to Physical Review Applied, our newest journal dedicated to publishing the highest quality research at the inter-section of physics and engineering.

  • 23

    Exhibits

    IFS - Interactive Flow Studies3136 New Hope DriveBillings, MT 59102Tel: 612-810-2727Web: www.interactiveflows.com

    Our Mission is to develop innovative systems for teach-ing and basic research in Hemodynamics, Fluid Me chanics, Heat Transfer and Design at schools world-wide by utilizing state of the art technology that enables deeper learning through hands on experimentation. Our inspiration and innovation comes from our total commitment and belief in our mission. Setup or upgrade your laboratory with our custom-izable state of the art instruments. FLOWCOACH, HE-MOFLOW, THERMOFLOW, ePIV, MiniPIV Systems and FLOWEX Software are designed to enable students to acquire 21st century knowledge and skills. Several interchangeable model inserts come with all the systems and the models can also be made by stu-dents as an integrated part of the DESIGN-BUILD-TEST-ANALYZE educational process. They all have attri butes of research grade instruments and provide exceptional opportunity for students to also participate in research. More information can be found at www.interactiveflows.com.

    IOP Publishing150 S. Independence Mall W., Suite 929Philadelphia, PA 19106Tel: 215-627-0880Fax: 215-627-0879Web: ioppublishing.orgEmail: [email protected]

    IOP Publishing provides a range of journals, magazines,books, websites and services that enable researchers and research organizations to reach the widest possible audience for their research. We combine the culture of a learned society with global reach and highly efficient and effective publishing systems and processes. In the field of fluid dynamics we are pleased to publish the journal Fluid Dynamics Research in partnership with the Japan Society of Fluid Mechanics.

    LaVision Inc.211 W. Michigan Avenue, Suite 100Ypsilanti, MI 48197Tel: 734-485-0913Fax: 240-465-4306Web: www.lavision.comE-Mail: [email protected]

    LaVision Inc. provides integrated laser imaging systems to scientific, industrial, and educational markets. La-Vision has extensive experience in optical techniques such as 2-D, stereo, and tomographic particle image veloci metry, gaseous and liquid laser induced fluores-cence, shadowgraphy for multi-phase flows, digital image correlation for deformation/strain, high-speed and ultra-high-speed imaging and intensified camera systems.

    Litron Lasers Ltd.8 Consul RoadRugby, Warwickshire, UK CV21 1PBTel: +44-0-1788-574444Fax: +44-0-1788-574888Web: www.litronlasers.comEmail: [email protected]

    Litron Lasers is the worlds leading manufacturer of PIV lasers. Litrons product range covers all your PIV laser needs from compact, rugged pulsed Nd:YAG systems with 15Hz to 100Hz repetition rates through to high energy modular systems up to 1.5J per pulse at 15Hz and 100mJ at 200Hz at 532nm. Our dedicated range of Diode Pumped Nd:YLF (527nm) PIV twin head lasers include an industry leading 30mJ per pulse, 1kHz model for time resolved studies giving true 24 hour operation for demanding applications. Litron will be displaying the Ber noulli PIV range at the conference. The Bernoulli PIV is built for demanding environments and offers seamless turnkey operation from an industrially rugged and fully sealed head. Visit the Litron Lasers booth and learn more.

    Measurement Science Enterprise, Inc.123 W. Bellevue Drive, Suite 1Pasadena, CA 91105Tel: 626-577-0566Fax: 626-577-0565Web: www.MeasurementSci.com

    MSE, Inc. manufactures miniature laser sensors for fluid, surface, and particle velocity measurements. We specialize in custom sensor built to each users tech-nical specifications. Our products include the miniLDV: the most compact LDV in the industry for measuring the speed and direction of fluid flow and surfaces; the microPro sensor: a micro profilometer that provides near wall ve locity profiles and shear stress measure-ment; the microV: the smallest time-of-flight velocity

  • 24

    Exhibits

    sensor; and the miniPCS: a Mie-scattering particle sizer and counter with built-in acquisition. In addition, we offer the flowLab table-top water tunnel for demonstrat-ing classical fluid flows visualization and measurement. Our products are in use in a variety of academic, research, and industrial facilities. Please visit our newly updated and easy to navigate website at www.MeasurementSci.com and follow us on our social me-dia platforms including Facebook, Google+, and Twitter (Twitter handle: @MSEminiLDV ). Sign up for our news-letter and stay tuned for the launch of our blog.

    NUMECA-USA,Inc.1044 Larkin StreetSan Francisco CA 94109Tel: 415-558-8483www.numeca.com

    NUMECA International is a pioneering provider of Com putational Fluid Dynamics software and consulting services. NUMECA software is used for the simulation, design and optimization of fluid flow and heat transfer. The reputation of NUMECA in the turbomachinery market has been continuously growing, to become a major software provider to gas turbine, aircraft engine, wind tur bine and pump manufacturers. Highly accurate flow analysis with NUMECA software allows product developers and design engineers to achieve superior product quality and performance at a reduced engi-neering cost. Furthermore the rapid solution time allows the automatic optimization of the design geometry.

    Photron9520 Padgett Street, Suite 110San Diego, CA 92126Tel: 858-684-3555 & 800-585-2129Fax: 858-684-3558Web: www.photron.comEmail: [email protected]

    Photron high speed cameras are used for Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) due to their reliability, short interframe times and ease of use and integration with lasers and peripherals. Cameras range from multiple miniature camera heads, mega pixel resolution to over 20,000 frames per second (fps), to a 4M pixel system.

    Physics of FluidsAIP Publishing LLC1305 Walt Whitman Road, Suite 300Melville, NY 11747, USATel: 516-576-2343Web: pof.aip.orgEmail: [email protected]

    Physics of Fluids is published by the AIP Publishing LLC with the cooperation of The American Physical Society Division of Fluid Dynamics. Editors are John Kim (University of California, Los Angeles) and L. Gary Leal (University of California, Santa Barbara). The journal is devoted to the publication of original theoretical, computational, and experimental contribu-tions to the dynamics of gases, liquids, and complex or multiphase fluids. Editorial content reflects the richness and breadth of the field of Fluid Dynamics in areas that include: Compressible Flows; Instability and Transition; Interfacial Flows; Viscous and Non-Newtonian Flows; Biofluid Mechanics; Laminar, Turbulent, and Geo-physical flows; Micro- and Nanofluid Mechanics; and Particulate, Multiphase, and Granular Flows. Journal metrics released by Thomson Reuters* show Physics of Fluids (PoF) to be a highly cited journal tracked in both Fluids & Plasmas Physics and Mechanics, with 20,567 citations in 2012. *2012 Journal Citation Reports (Thomson Reuters, 2013).

    Pointwise, Inc.213 S. Jennings AvenueFort Worth, TX 76104Tel: 817-377-2807Fax: 817-377-2799Web: www.pointwise.comEmail: [email protected]

    Pointwise is solving the top problem facing engineering analysts today: mesh generation for computational fluid dynamics (CFD). Pointwises meshing software gen-erates structured, unstructured, and hybrid meshes; interfaces with ANSYS FLUENT, STAR-CD, SU2 and OpenFOAM, as well as many neutral formats such as CGNS; runs on Windows (Intel and AMD), Linux (Intel and AMD), and Mac; and has a scripting language that can automate CFD meshing. Our software is known for its high quality grids and ease of use and for the expert technical support provided with it. More information is available on Pointwises website, pointwise.com.

  • 25

    Exhibits

    Quantel USA601 Haggerty LaneBozeman, MT 59715Tel: 406-586-0131Fax: 406-586-2924Web: www.quantel-laser.comEmail: [email protected]

    Quantel, founded in 1970, is a global leader in the designand manufacture of high-power, solid-state lasers. With design centers in Paris and the USA (Bozeman, MT), Quantel lasers are used in applications ranging from spectroscopy to atom cooling; PIV to combustion research. Uniquely, Quantel offers customers very flexible scientific lasers with user configurable wave-lengths and performance parameters as well as designed for purpose ruggedized lasers for industrial applications.

    Royal Society Publishing6-9 Carlton House TerraceLondon, UK, SW1Y 5AGTel: 4420 74512647Fax: 4420 79302170Web: http://royalsocietypublishing.org

    The Royal Society publishes two peer reviewed physicalscience journals. Proceedings publishes research papers and short reviews containing interesting newideas. The articles published are high quality, original, ofinterest to a wide range of scientists, and often have longcitation half-lives. Philosophical Transactions publishes themed journal issues on topics of current scientific im-portance. Edited by leading authorities in the field, theseissues comprise original research, reviews and opinionsfrom prominent researchers. The Royal Society also pub lishes Royal Society Open Science, a new, fast, open journal publishing high quality research across all of science, engineering and mathematics. For further information, please visit the Royal Society Publishing booth or visit http://royalsocietypublishing.org.

    Spectral Energies, LLC5100 Springfield Street, Suite 301Dayton, OH 45431Tel: 937-256-7733Fax: 937-256-7702Web: www.spectralenergies.comEmail: [email protected]

    Spectral Energies, LLC (SE) utilizes advanced tech-nologies in optics, photonics, active sensing, and nu merical analysis to solve real-world problems encountered in thermal-fluid, energy, propulsion, and aerospace systems. As a result of this continuing experience, our world-class personnel have fielded commercial instruments for gas sensing, chemical speciation, thermometry, pressure, and velocimetry for a wide range of applications. Our ongoing development

    efforts include component-level engineering (e.g., laser sources and custom opto-mechanics), as well as system-level instrument integration, training, consulting, and application. SE also has machining and manu-facturing capabilities for fluid mechanics, combustion, and other test cell applications. Ask about Quasimodo, our commercially available kHz-rate burst-mode laser system, now optimized for PIV and PLIF applications.

    Springer233 Spring StreetNew York, NY 10013Tel: 212-460-1600Web: www.springer.comEmail: [email protected]

    Looking to publish your research? Discover Springers print and electronic publication services, including Open Access! Get high-quality review, maximum readership and rapid distribution. Visit our booth and discuss with our Editors how our publishing models and services can provide the widest dissemination of your work, too. You can also browse key titles and buy (e)books at discount prices. With Springer you are in good company.

    Taylor and Francis4 Park Square, Milton ParkOxford, UK, OX14 4RNTel: 0207-017-6178Web: www.tandfonline.com

    Taylor & Francis boasts a growing, wide-ranging and high calibre journals portfolio in Engineering. Our journals are edited by some of the most prominent academics in their fields. We are partnered with many of the worlds leading societies, such as the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport, European Society for Engineering Education, Engineering Project Organization Society, International Association for Vehicle System Dynamics, International Council for Research and Innovation in Bu