Scott Kelly
Associate professor of Mechanical Engineering and Engineering Science, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Born: January 24, 1969
1991: B.S., Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.
1992: M.S., Mechanical Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA.
1998: Ph.D., Mechanical Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA.
Research:
Differential geometric methods in analytical mechanics Biologically-inspired robotic locomotion in fluids Nonlinear dynamics and control problems in systems biology
Honors & Awards:
2005: National Science Foundation CAREER Award
2006: Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE)
2007: UIUC Engineering Council Excellence in Undergraduate Advising Award
August 2007 – July 2010: Charlotte Research Institute Fellow
Professional Affiliations:
American Mathematical Society American Physical Society Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers International Federation of Nonlinear Analysts Mathematical Association of America Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
Publications:
Tallapragada P., Kelly S. D.
Dynamics and Self-Propulsion of a Spherical Body Shedding Coaxial Vortex Rings in an Ideal Fluid
2013, vol. 18, nos. 1-2, pp. 21-32
Abstract
We describe a model for the dynamic interaction of a sphere with uniform density and a system of coaxial circular vortex rings in an ideal fluid of equal density. At regular intervals in time, a constraint is imposed that requires the velocity of the fluid relative to the sphere to have no component transverse to a particular circular contour on the sphere. In order to enforce this constraint, new vortex rings are introduced in a manner that conserves the total momentum in the system. This models the shedding of rings from a sharp physical ridge on the sphere coincident with the circular contour. If the position of the contour is fixed on the sphere, vortex shedding is a source of drag. If the position of the contour varies periodically, propulsive rings may be shed in a manner that mimics the locomotion of certain jellyfish. We present simulations representing both cases.
|