Dimitrios Psaltis

Dimitrios Psaltis
dpsaltis3@gatech.edu
Personal Website

I am a professor of Physics at Georgia Tech. I use advanced computational techniques, hybrid computer architectures, and innovative algorithms to answer fundamental questions related to the observational appearance of black holes, the properties of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence, and the interaction of matter with radiation in extreme conditions.

I am a founding member of the Event Horizon Telescope, the international mm-VLBI experiment that has taken the first picture of a black hole with the horizon-scale resolution, and served for three years (2016-2019) as the Project Scientist of the collaboration.

Before moving to Georgia Tech in 2022, I was a professor of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Arizona and the Chair of the Theoretical Astrophysics Program there.

Professor
Additional Research
Black Hole Images General Relativity
University, College, and School/Department

Daniel Goldman

Daniel Goldman
dgoldman3@gatech.edu
The Crab Lab

My research integrates my work in complex fluids and granular media and the biomechanics of locomotion of organisms and robots to address problems in nonequilibrium systems that involve interaction of matter with complex media. For example, how do organisms like lizards, crabs, and cockroaches cope with locomotion on complex terrestrial substrates (e.g. sand, bark, leaves, and grass). I seek to discover how biological locomotion on challenging terrain results from the nonlinear, many degree of freedom interaction of the musculoskeletal and nervous systems of organisms with materials with complex physical behavior. The study of novel biological and physical interactions with complex media can lead to the discovery of principles that govern the physics of the media. My approach is to integrate laboratory and field studies of organism biomechanics with systematic laboratory studies of physics of the substrates, as well as to create mathematical and physical (robot) models of both organism and substrate. Discovery of the principles of locomotion on such materials will enhance robot agility on such substrates

Dunn Family Professor; School of Physics
Director; Complex Rheology And Biomechanics (CRAB) Lab
Phone
404.894.0993
Office
Howey C202
Additional Research
biomechanics; neuromechanics; granular media; robotics; robophysics
University, College, and School/Department
Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=r7wE4M4AAAAJ&view_op=list_works&sortby=pubdate
Profile on GT Physics