Carnegie Mellon’s Jessica Zhang Wins Young Investigator Award for Research Excellence from Office of Naval Research
April 13, 2010
Contact: Chriss Swaney
Carnegie Mellon University
412.268.5776
PITTSBURGH-Carnegie Mellon University's Yongjie (Jessica) Zhang has received a three-year, $510,000 Young Investigator Award for research excellence from the Office of Naval Research.
"I
am honored and extremely excited about this wonderful award because it gives me
additional research resources and exposure to some challenging real world
problems," said Zhang, an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical
Engineering at Carnegie Mellon.
Zhang, one of 17 award recipients nationwide, was selected by the
Department of Defense's (DOD)
Office of Naval Research, which invests in new faculty members who show
exceptional promise for creative study. The Office of Naval Research provides
the science and technology necessary to maintain the U.S. Navy and Marine
Corps's technological advantage.
Zhang will use her grant funds to develop novel algorithms and a
software package designed to help improve and streamline ship design and
analysis for the Navy. The research results will significantly improve the
capability of early-design evaluations as well as complex analyses for a range
of physics and applications in DOD/Navy research, such as vibration, acoustics
and shock analysis.
"We want to develop tools and specially-designed geometric modeling and
mesh formulas that will help in the construction and modeling of complex
structures like Naval ships and submarines," Zhang said. At present, there are
no simulation systems in use for automatically testing the product performance
for some of these highly technical ship structures, according to Zhang.
"This is a wonderful award for an innovative and hardworking researcher,
and we are extremely proud of Jessica's ongoing dedication to excellence," said
Nadine Aubry, head of Carnegie Mellon's Department of Mechanical Engineering.
Zhang received her undergraduate degree in engineering in 1996 at
Tsinghua University in China. She earned a master's degree in solid mechanics
engineering in 2002, and a Ph.D. in computational engineering and science in
2005 from the University of Texas at Austin.