Prof. Thomas Y. HOU

侯一釗教授

Former IAS Senior Visiting Fellow
Charles Lee Powell Professor of Applied and Computational Mathematics
California Institute of Technology

Prof. Thomas Y. HOU

侯一釗教授

Former IAS Senior Visiting Fellow
Charles Lee Powell Professor of Applied and Computational Mathematics
California Institute of Technology

Research Areas:
Numerical analysis, large scale computations, vortex dynamics, free boundary problems, multi-scale phenomena, numerical upscaling, homogenization.

Prof. Thomas Hou received his Bachelor Degree from South China University of Technology in 1982, and his PhD from UCLA in 1987. Upon graduating from UCLA, he researched at the NYU Courant Institute and then became a faculty member in 1989. He moved to the Applied Math Department at Caltech in 1993, and is currently the Charles Lee Powell Professor of Applied and Computational Mathematics at Caltech.

Prof. Hou is one of the leading experts in vortex dynamics and multiscale problems. His research interests are centered around developing analytical tools and effective numerical methods for vortex dynamics, interfacial flows, and multiscale problems. In recent years, he has devoted considerable effort to investigate the 3D Euler singularity and the Clay Millennium Problem on the Navier-Stokes equations. He was also the founding Editor-in-Chief of the SIAM Journal on Multiscale Modeling and Simulation (2002-2007) and the founding Co-Editor-in-Chief of the Advances in Adaptive Data Analysis (2009-2015).

Prof. Hou has received a number of honors and awards, including Fellow of the American Mathematical Society (2012), Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2011), the SIAM Fellow (2009), the Computational and Applied Sciences Award from USACM (2005), the Morningside Gold Medal in Applied Mathematics (2004), the SIAM Wilkinson Prize in Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing (2001), the Francois N Frenkiel Award from the Division of Fluid Mechanics of APS (1998), the Feng Kang Prize in Scientific Computing (1997), the Sloan Fellowship (1990-1992).

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