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Computational Fluid Dynamics→Resources:Open Admissions, Scholarships & Awards |
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Scholarships & Awards for Computational Fluid Dynamics*
- John von Neumann Fellowship, Alexandria, Virginia, USA
This is one of Sandia's most prestigious postdoctoral fellowships with funding from the Applied Mathematics Research Program in the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research and Sandia's Lab Directed Research and Development Program. We seek applicants with interests in applying computational methods to scientific and engineering applications, including additive manufacturing, circuit simulation, computational fluid dynamics (CFD), computational solid mechanics, cyber security, earth systems, electrical systems, hyperspectral imaging, magneto-hydrodynamics (MHD), micro-electro mechanical systems (MEMS), material design, molecular dynamics, power grid, sensor data fusion, shock physics, signal processing, and turbulence modeling.
- Lifetime Achievement Award, CFD Society of Canada Canada
A Lifetime Achievement award was established by the CFD Society of Canada in 2005 to recognize individuals who have made outstanding time-enduring contributions to computational fluid dynamics in Canada. The contribution can be in the form of important advancements in the state-of-the-art of computational fluid dynamics, and/or significant impact on the use of CFD in Canada through research, teaching or innovative industrial practice.
- Graduate Scholarship Award, CFD Society of Canada Canada
The CFD Society of Canada (CFDSC) has established a scholarship in 2005 to encourage graduate students to pursue a thesis based degree involving the advancement or application of computational fluid dynamics. Budget permitting, up to two scholarships of $4,000 will be awarded annually. The applicant must be a full time student in a Master’s or Ph.D. level graduate studies program at an accredited Canadian university.
- Master's scholarship: Computational Fluid Dynamics - Filtering and capturing trace metals from water, University of CanterburyChristchurch, New Zealand
This project is working toward an affordable and customisable method to filter heavy metals from drinking water. The scholarship will support an ME or MSc part II student with a background in Engineering, Mathematics, Physics, or Computer Science. The project will develop new water filtration systems that can remove arsenic, copper, and cadmium from water - making it safer to drink - without relying on large, complex and expensive infrastructure.
- SAE/Ramesh Agarwal Computational Fluid Dynamics Award
The SAE/Ramesh Agarwal Computational Fluid Dynamics Award recognizes professionals (individual or team) who have made significant science and engineering contributions to computational fluid dynamics (CFD). Nominees may be professionals from industry, academia, or government who have made contributions to CFD and its applications within the aerospace or ground vehicle industries.
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