Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Writer: Shanna Relford
news@utsi.edu
Dr.
Trevor Moulden, a professor in the Mechanical, Aerospace, Biomedical
and Engineering Science Department at The University of Tennessee
Space Institute in Tullahoma, traveled to India in March to
participate in an international conference. Dr. Moulden was invited
as a keynote speaker for the 2nd International Symposium on the
Recent Advances in Experimental Fluid Mechanics (RAEFM) held March
3-6 across the globe at the Koneru Lakshmaiah College of Engineering
in Vijayawada, India.
Dr. Moulden presented his keynote paper entitled “Symmetry and
Invariance in Fluid Mechanics” during the conference and, at the
opening ceremony, was presented with an award from the Flow Physics
Society. The Professor Rathakrishnan Award was conferred on
Professor Moulden “in recognition of professional standing and
successful practice of Transonic Flows.” Dr. Moulden published a
book entitled “Fundamentals of Transonic Flow” in 1984 and has since
continued his work in this area of aeronautics. Transonic flow
refers to the flow of air over an aircraft traveling very close to
the speed of sound, from about Mach 0.8–1.2. Most modern commercial
jet aircraft spend a large portion of their flight time at transonic
speeds, when some of the airflow passing over the plane is
supersonic, and some is not.
Dr. Moulden also presented an invited paper at the First RAEFM International Symposium held at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur, India in 2000. His participation in these international conferences not only gives Dr. Moulden the opportunity to interact with active fluid mechanics researchers from around the world including Japan, Germany, Egypt, Singapore and Thailand, but also to represent UTSI on an international level.

AMARAVATHI BUDDHA ON THE RIVER KRISHNA—Traveling by boat along the River Krishna, considered one of India’s holy rivers, UTSI Professor Trevor Moulden snapped this photo of a statue of Dhyana Buddha under construction in Amaravathi, India, about 28 miles from Vijayawada, where Dr. Moulden was participating in an international conference in March.

THE RIVER KRISHNA IN INDIA—While in India as a keynote speaker for the 2nd International Symposium on the “Recent Advances in Experimental Fluid Mechanics,” UTSI Professor Trevor Moulden took a journey along the River Krishna in southern India. Pictured above are the river banks in Amaravathi, India, about 28 miles from Vijayawada, where Dr. Moulden was participating in an international conference in March.