Difference between revisions of "Michael Falk"
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Associate Professor in the departments of Materials Science and Engineering, Mechanical Engineering and Physics and Astronomy at Johns Hopkins University since 2013 where he devises atomic scale computational methods for understanding non-equilibrium processes that govern deformation, failure, phase transitions and friction within and between materials. He also serves as advisor to the GLBT Graduate Students, JHU oSTEM (out in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) and the undergraduate Diverse Sexuality and Gender Alliance. | Associate Professor in the departments of Materials Science and Engineering, Mechanical Engineering and Physics and Astronomy at Johns Hopkins University since 2013 where he devises atomic scale computational methods for understanding non-equilibrium processes that govern deformation, failure, phase transitions and friction within and between materials. He also serves as advisor to the GLBT Graduate Students, JHU oSTEM (out in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) and the undergraduate Diverse Sexuality and Gender Alliance. | ||
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+ | ==See Also== | ||
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+ | * [[LGBTQ Physicists]] | ||
==Further Reading/Research== | ==Further Reading/Research== |
Revision as of 15:59, 3 March 2016
Country
United States
Birth - Death
Occupation
Academic
Description
Associate Professor in the departments of Materials Science and Engineering, Mechanical Engineering and Physics and Astronomy at Johns Hopkins University since 2013 where he devises atomic scale computational methods for understanding non-equilibrium processes that govern deformation, failure, phase transitions and friction within and between materials. He also serves as advisor to the GLBT Graduate Students, JHU oSTEM (out in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) and the undergraduate Diverse Sexuality and Gender Alliance.