Michael Shelley (mathematician)
Michael J. Shelley (born August 17, 1959) is an American applied mathematician who works on the modeling and simulation of complex systems arising in physics and biology. This has included free-boundary problems in fluids and materials science, singularity formation in partial differential equations, modeling visual perception in the primary visual cortex, dynamics of complex and active fluids, cellular biophysics, and fluid-structure interaction problems such as the flapping of flags, stream-lining in nature, and flapping flight. He is also the co-founder and co-director of the Courant Institute's Applied Mathematics Lab.Shelley was born in La Junta, Colorado. He holds a BA in Mathematics from the University of Colorado (1981) and a PhD in Applied Mathematics from the University of Arizona (1985). He was a postdoctoral researcher at Princeton University, and then joined the faculty of mathematics at the University of Chicago. In 1992 he joined the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University where he is the George and Lilian Lyttle Professor of Applied Mathematics as well as Professor of Neuroscience (NYU) and Professor of Mechanical Engineering (NYU-Tandon). In 2016 he also became a senior research scientist and group leader in biophysical modeling at the Center for Computational Biology (CCB) of the Flatiron Institute, a division of the Simons Foundation. In 2019 he was appointed Director of CCB. Provided by Wikipedia
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Lattices of Hydrodynamically Interacting Flapping Swimmers by Anand U. Oza, Leif Ristroph, Michael J. Shelley
Published 2019-11-01
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A design framework for actively crosslinked filament networks by Sebastian Fürthauer, Daniel J Needleman, Michael J Shelley
Published 2021-01-01
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The many behaviors of deformable active droplets by Y. -N. Young, Michael J. Shelley, David B. Stein
Published 2021-04-01
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Active contraction of microtubule networks by Peter J Foster, Sebastian Fürthauer, Michael J Shelley, Daniel J Needleman
Published 2015-12-01
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Stoichiometric interactions explain spindle dynamics and scaling across 100 million years of nematode evolution by Reza Farhadifar, Che-Hang Yu, Gunar Fabig, Hai-Yin Wu, David B Stein, Matthew Rockman, Thomas Müller-Reichert, Michael J Shelley, Daniel J Needleman
Published 2020-09-01
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