2005 Essay Contest
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Biographies of Women in Math
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2005 AWM Essay Contest:
Grand Prize Winner
Discovering Mathematics In Nature
By Arica Fong
Dr. Linda Smolka uses a variety of techniques to approach her work in
fluid mechanics. In her lab, she captures the motion of fluids with
photography. She then describes the motion she observes using
differential equations derived from physical laws.
When I met with Dr. Smolka, she showed me a series of photos that
captured a falling drop of oil. The droplet elongated to form a
cylinder before the tear-shaped end separated from the cylinder. In
another series of photos, the cylinder itself broke into several
droplets as it fell. These photos have stimulated Dr. Smolka's
curiousity about nature and its relationship to physical processes.
Although Dr. Smolka is now a professor of mathematics at Bucknell
University in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, she was aware of neither her
interest in teaching, nor her passion for research in fluid dynamics as
an undergrad. After earning her bachelors in civil engineering from
Princeton, she worked for about a year in computer consulting, and then
for another year as a structural engineer. However, these jobs were not
challenging for her, and she missed the academic environment she had
experienced at Princeton. Subsequently, she shifted her focus towards
academic life when she became a mathematics teacher at The Lawrenceville
School, an independent high school in New Jersey. She discovered she
enjoyed teaching and continued to teach for four years. Since the
school encouraged teachers to get higher degrees in the fields they
taught, Dr. Smolka entered graduate school for a Masters degree,
intending to return to Lawrenceville.
When Dr. Smolka was applying for graduate school, Dr. Diane Henderson
was a faculty member in the mathematics department at Penn State. Dr
Henderson had a background in engineering and physical oceanography.
Dr. Henderson was in search of a student to work with her on droplet
formulation in her experimental fluids lab. Dr. Henderson's research
caught Dr. Smolka's interest because they had similar backgrounds and
similar interests in applied mathematics. Dr. Smolka became fascinated
by the research she started during her first years at Penn State.
After completing her masters in mathematics, she decided to work on a
doctorate. Of her advisors Dr. Henderson and Dr. Andrew Belmonte, Dr.
Smolka says, "They were very dedicated scientists who saw the beauty in
nature and instilled that in me as well."
For her dissertation, Dr. Smolka's studied the motion and stability of
free surfaces, specifically the surface of a droplet. She captured
wonderful images of these droplets and the cylinders they formed with
high-speed photography. Depending on the density, viscosity, and surface
tension of the fluid, she found that the surface of the droplet may be
perturbed, and the cylinder may break up into several separate droplets.
Based on physical principles, she applied mathematics to describe the
motion and stability of these droplet-forming cylinders. Dr. Smolka
used partial differential equations and ordinary differential equations
to describe and model different free surfaces. Dr. Smolka's research
can be applied ink jet printing, where printed letters are formed by ink
droplets.
Since she had invested a lot in her education but still enjoyed
teaching, Dr. Smolka decided she wanted to work towards a tenure track
position at a university. She did her postdoc at Duke University for
two and a half years through the NSF's VIGRE program. Then she came to
Bucknell University. In her past two years at Bucknell, she has been
teaching classes in applied mathematics and continuing her research in
fluid mechanics. She has also established an experimental fluids lab.
One of her goals at Bucknell is to integrate undergraduates further in
her research by getting them involved in her lab, and an REU student in
physics worked with her in the lab during the summer of 2005. Her lab
enables her to continue her research on free surfaces in different
geometries, such as the surfaces of falling liquid sheets.
Outside of her work, she likes to spend as much of her free time as
possible in the outdoors, hiking, mountain biking, and gardening. She
is also involved with folk music.
About the student:
My name is Arica Fong. I am from Los Altos,
California. I transferred from UC Davis to Bucknell University in 2004,
and I am currently a senior mathematics major. This spring, I will
travel abroad to Hungary to study in the Budapest Semesters in
Mathematics program. After graduating, I plan to spend a few years
working before applying to graduate school in mathematics. I am
currently interested in the fields of algebra and graph theory. In my
free time I enjoy participating in the Putnam Club and practicing Tae
Kwon Do.
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