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7/31/2019 Aae Overview Fall 2011
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE Distinguished Alumni
Purdue alumni play key leadership roles within all aspects of
the aerospace world and provide the world with engineers
who have designed, built, tested and flown the many vehicles
that have changed the face of both flight and space
exp orat on ur ng t e century an at t e start o t s
second century of flight.
Purdue has an impressive group of alumni including 22
graduates selected as NASA astronauts with 14 graduating
from the school of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Arguably
the most famous are Neil Armstrong and Eugene Cernan who
are the first and last men on the moon.
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE Distinguished Faculty
31Tenure/Tenure Track faculty members
19 Full professors 4 Associate professors
8 Assistant professors
4 Adjunct professors
7 Courtesy Appointments
1 in Industrial Engineering 4 in Mechanical Engineering
1 in Engineering Education
1 in Earth and Atmospheric/Physics
5 Distinguished Professor
5 Named Professors President Emeritus Martin C. Jischke
Director of the Center for Advanced Manufacturing
Director of Global Engineering Programs
Honorary Industry Professor Dr Allen Novick
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE Faculty
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE Total Faculty
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE Faculty
Aerodynamics
A. Alexeenko, Assistant Professor; Ph.D., Penn State, 2003
G. A. Blaisdell, Associate Professor; Ph.D., Stanford, 1991
S. H. Collicott, Professor; Ph.D., Stanford, 1991
. . sc e, res en mer us; . ., assac use s ns u e o
Technology, 1968.
A. S. Lyrintzis, Professor; Ph.D., Cornell, 1988
S. P. Schneider, Professor; Ph.D., Caltech, 1989
T. Shih, Professor and AAE Head; Ph.D., The University of Michigan,1981
J. P. Sullivan, Professor; Sc.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
1973
M. H. Williams, Professor and Associate Head; Ph.D., Princeton, 1975
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE Faculty
Aerospace Systems
D. Andrisani II, Associate Professor; Ph.D., SUNY at Buffalo, 1979
B. S. Caldwell(By Courtesy) Associate Professor of Industrial
Engineering; Ph.D., University of California-Davis, 1990
. . , . ., ,
D. DeLaurentis, Assistant Professor: PhD
I. Hwang, Assistant Professor; Ph.D., Stanford University, 2004
K. Marais, Assistant Professor; Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, 2005
J. P. Sullivan, Professor; Sc.D., MIT, 1973
D. Sun, Assistant Professor; Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley,
2008
T. A. Weisshaar, Professor; Ph.D., Stanford, 1971
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE Faculty
Astrodynamics and Space Applications
D. Filmer, Adjunct Professor; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1961
J. L. Garrison, Associate Professor; Ph.D., University of Colorado
at Boulder, 1997
K. C. Howe , Hsu Lo Pro essor o Aeronautica anAstronautical Engineering; Ph.D., Stanford, 1983
J. M. Longuski, Professor, Ph.D., Michigan, 1979
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE Faculty
Dynamics and Control
D. Andrisani, Associate Professor; Ph.D., SUNY at Buffalo, 1979
M. J. Corless, Professor; Ph.D., Berkeley, 1984
D. DeLaurentis, Assistant Professor: Ph.D., Georgia Institute of
Tec no ogy, 1998
D. Filmer, Adjunct Professor; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1961
A. E. Frazho, Professor; Ph.D., Michigan, 1977
I. Hwang, Assistant Professor; Ph.D., Stanford University, 2004
D. Sun, Assistant Professor; Ph.D., University of California at
Berkeley, 2008
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE FacultyPropulsion
W. Anderson, Associate Professor; Ph.D., The Pennsylvania State University,
1996
J. Gore (By Courtesy) Vincent P. Reilly Professor of Mechanical Engineering;
Ph.D.,
. . . ., ,
N. Key(By Courtesy) Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Ph.D.,
Purdue University, 2007
C. L. Merkle, Reilly Professor of Engineering; Ph.D., Princeton University,
1969
T. Pourpoint, Research Assistant Professor, Ph.D., Purdue University, 2005
L. Qiao, Assistant Professor; Ph.D., University of Michigan, 2007
S. Son (by courtesy) Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Ph.D.,
University of Illinois, 1993
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
AAE FacultyStructures & Materials
W. Chen, Professor; Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1995
W. A. Crossley, Professor, Ph.D., Arizona State, 1995
J. F. Doyle, Professor, Ph.D., Illinois, 1977
Engineering and Technology Integration, Ph.D., Illinois, 1971P.K. Imbrie (By Courtesy) Associate Professor; Ph.D., Texas A & M, 2000
R. B. Pipes, John L. Bray Distinguished Professor of Engineering; Ph.D.,
University of Texas, 1972
C. T. Sun, Neil A. Armstrong Distinguished Professor of Aeronautical &
Astronautical Engineering, Ph.D., Northwestern, 1967
V. Tomar, Assistant Professor; Ph.D., Georgia Tech, 2005
T. A. Weisshaar, Professor, Ph.D., Stanford, 1971
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Enrollment
128 BS, 74 MS, and 16 PhD Degrees awarded in 09-103 NSF, 4 NDSEG , and 3 NASA Fellowships awarded in 08-09
46 Engineering Professional Education Students in 10-11
UG are 68% non-resident US students (59% for CoE)
Grad are 89% non-resident US students (88% for CoE)
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Student DemographicsUndergrads
Undergraduate enrollment is down .7% from last year
College of Engineering - 5.9% under-represented Minorities
19.8% - Female
19.4% - International (10-11)
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Graduating Class of 2010
105 BSc StudentsAs of 11/2010
Biagi, Chance, Cummins, London, Titzer, Inc. 1 NASA Dryden 1
Boeing Everett 2 NASA Johnson Space Center 1
Butler 1 Neltecho 1
o am ra ney oc e yne
Dell Computers 1 Raytheon Missiles - Tucson 1
Dynetics Inc. 1 Rockwell Collins 2
Electro-Motive Diesel, Inc. 1 SAEC-Kinetic Vision 1
General Electric 3 SAIC, Crane, IN. 1
Hedding Aerospace 1 SpaceX 1Jacobs Technology, Inc. 1 United Space Alliance 1
Lockheed Martin 3 University of Stuttgart 2
Loral 1 Wright Patterson AFB (civilian) 2
Military Service 13 Graduate School 33
Movimento 1 Seeking Employment 22
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Graduating Class of 2010
56 M.Sc. & Ph.D. StudentsAs of 09/2010
Aerospace Corp. 1 Pratt & Whitney 1
Blue Origin, Aerospace Engr. 1 Rolls Royce 1
.
Dynetics, Inc. 1 Space X 2
Emergent Space Technologies 1 United Launch Alliance 1
G.E. Global Research 1 Wright-Patterson AFB 2
General Electric 2 Purdue University Sr. Engineer 1
Jet Propulsion Laboratory 1 Purdue University Instructor/Lecturer 2John Hopkins Univ. APL 1 Post Doctoral 2
Mitsubishi Electric 2 Masters continuing to Ph.D. 19
NASA 1 Seeking Employment 3
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
External Research Expenditure
DoE
DoD
FAA
21st
Industry
NASA
NSF
Other
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Impressive Reputation
Purdue Engineering ranked #13th in
Graduate Program National Rankings
August 2010
Report for graduate programs
Aeronautical and Astronautical
Engineering ranked 6th in thecountry by US News and World
report for graduate programs
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Impressive Reputation
Purdue Engineering ranked #8th in
Undergraduate Program National Rankings
August 2010
Report for undergraduate programs
Aeronautical and Astronautical
Engineering ranked 4th in thecountry by US News and World
report for undergraduate programs
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
US NEWS AAE Graduate Ratings
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
US NEWS AAE Undergrad Rankings
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
The Neil Armstrong Hall of Engineering
Dedicated in the presence of 16 Purdue astronaut
alumni in October 2007, Armstrong Hall provides 21st
.
A key feature of Armstrong Hall is the concept of Team
Learning Modules, where students will experience the
entire engineering life-cycle.
This concept addresses a common theme emanatingfrom alumni and industry advisors the demand for
engineers who have traditional technical expertise
along with design and build experience, often on
industrial scale projects, and who can work in diverse
teams.
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
Aerodynamics
Experimental facilities include: Four wind
tunnels located at the Aerospace Sciences
Laboratory (ASL).
eorge a mer ac n unne
Purdue maintains the only quiet-flow facility inthe world capable at operating at Mach 6.
Capable of conducting experiments to yield
critical data the Mach 6 nozzle is polished to a
near perfect mirror finish.
Experiments have been conducted to yield data for designing advanced missiles
such as the Falcon HTV-2 and an advanced aircraft called the X-51A, which is
powered by scramjets. The X-51 project is led by the Air Force Research
Laboratory and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
Aerodynamics
A four-story high drop tower is nearing completion to
be used for unique experimentation within the
Aerospace Two-Phase Flow Lab. This unique feature of
and students to explore the effects of microgravity onphysical phenomena such as combustion and fluid
dynamics.
In this way, they will perform experiments in conditions
identical to those in the International Space Station, yetonly for two seconds. Two seconds is sufficiently long
for valuable experimentation - note that experiments in
Professor Collicott's previous 1-second tower led to a
highly successful experiment in the International Space
Station.
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
Radio Navigation Laboratory
Provides resources for the experimental
anal sis and stud of s ace-based radio
transmissions for navigation and remotesensing.
The lab has the ability to receive all
currently transmitting GNSS signals through
a Leica AR25 antenna on the roof ofArmstrong Hall
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
Dynamics and Control
Current research is divided into aircraft
desi n for im roved handlin ualities
astrodynamics, robust and nonlinear controltheory and applications, estimated theory
and applications, dynamics and control of
flexible spacecraft, mission design, modeling
and control of aeroelastic aircraft, spacecraft
maneuvers and trajectory analysis andoptimization.
The Control Systems Laboratory (CSL) contains four Dell computer based
acquisition and control systems.
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
Propulsion
The propulsion group have unique facilities
for the stud of rocket ro ulsion and
energy conversion. The labs are based at theMaurice Zucrow Laboratory (MZL) and the
Aerospace Sciences Laboratory (ASL).
The test cells at MZL are poured, reinforced
concrete design with containment steel
doors and explosive rated viewing windows.These cells are classed for both Class 1.1 and
1.3 explosives.
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
The Composite Materials Laboratory
The McDonnell Douglas Composite
Materials Laborator was started in 1973 b
Dr. C.T. Sun who remains its director.
The lab is used for research in composite
materials and structures and has facilities for
preparing materials and specimens, testing
and inspection. The autoclave provides pressure,
vacuum, temperature, and time
controls for cure cycles in making
polymeric composites.
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
The Fatigue and Fracture Laboratory
Approx 1200 Sq Ft is designed to conduct research directed at evaluating
the dama e tolerance ro erties of materials and com onents.
The lab is well equipped to conduct structural integrity motivated
research directed at evaluating the damage tolerant properties of
materials and components. Two computer-controlled electro-hydraulic
test machines (11,000 and 22,000 lb. capacity) and associated
equipment are used to measure fracture loads and to study fatigue crackformation.
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
Structural Dynamics Laboratory
The 1400 Sq Ft Structural Dynamics provides
students with a hands-on opportunity for the
most state-of-the-art technologies and
cutt ng-e ge tec n ques.
The lab has the latest equipment for
recording ultra-dynamic events. Major
equipment includes Norland and Nicolet
digital recorders, a one-million-frame-per-
second dynamic camera, impact gun, andvarious computer peripherals for date
acquisition.
Primary research interest is in the impact of structures and
the analysis of consequent stress waves.
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Our Facilities
Interfacial Multiphysics Laboratory
The focus of the lab are on problems related to
thermomechanical behavior of ceramics and
sem con uc or ma er a s an c emo- o-mec an cs
of organics-ceramic materials. The lab is directed byDr. Vikas Tomar.
The lab also owns a 400 processor supercomputer
cluster as well as access to Tera-Grid for high
performance computing through the Purdue RosenCenter for Advanced Computing.
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
DevelopmentGiving History
$12
$14
$16
Facilities
Programs
Faculty Support
Student Support
Successful School Campaign ~$18M
~$475M CoE, ~$1.7B Purdue
School Goal is to continue annual
support of >$2MStudent scholarships and
fellowships
Faculty support
Unrestricted funds for special
opportunities
$0
$2
$4
$6
$8
$10
FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010
Millio
ns Unrestricted
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Development
AAE Funding Priorities
UnrestrictedUnrestrictedUnrestrictedUnrestricted Used for Schools highest priorities
Faculty SupportFaculty SupportFaculty SupportFaculty Support Professorship/Chair
recruit and retain the best educators andresearchers
Student ScholarshipsStudent ScholarshipsStudent ScholarshipsStudent Scholarships Recruit and retain the best
and brightest students
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Development
AAE Annual Giving
Increase annual giving by 5%
More Presidents Council members3 year incremental pledge
$1,000 annually
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School of Aeronautics and AstronauticsSchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Contact Details
Dr. Tom I-P. Shih
+1-765-494-5118