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Physics   College of Engineering 

Dr. Robert Fisher

Dr. Robert Fisher

Robert Fisher, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor

  • Ph.D. in Physics, University of California at Berkeley, 2002
  • B.S. in Physics with Honors, California Institute of Technology, 1994

Contact Information:


Biography:

Dr. Robert Fisher earned his B.S. in physics with honors from Caltech in 1994, his Ph.D. in physics from the University of California at Berkeley in 2002. He was subsequently a postdoctoral research scholar at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL, 2002-2005), and research scientist at the DOE ASC Flash Center in the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of Chicago (2005-2008). While at Chicago, he was also an adjunct faculty member at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where he taught a popular course on introductory astronomy for undergraduate art majors.

The primary theme of Dr. Fisher's research is the fundamental physics of turbulent flows, and its application to the two endpoints of stellar evolution -- star formation and supernovae -- using a combination of theoretical and computational techniques. While at LLNL, he developed the first quantitative theory of the distribution of stellar binary periods. At Chicago, Dr. Fisher led an international team of computational scientists and physicists in the development and analysis of the largest three-dimensional computer simulation of weakly-compressible fully-developed turbulence ever completed, resulting in the publication of two Physical Review Letters earlier this year. Also at Chicago, Dr. Fisher was part of the team to carry out the first self-consistent computational simulation of the three-dimension detonation of a Type Ia supernova.

Dr. Fisher is looking forward to teaching physics 113, classical mechanics, during the fall of 2008. In the spring of 2009, he will be teaching a new graduate-level course in computational astrophysics in the physics department.

Dr. Fisher is starting up a new research group in computational astrophysics in the physics department during the fall of 2008, and will be pursuing several exciting research projects in star formation and supernovae. He invites graduate and undergraduate students who are interested in theoretical astrophysics and computational physics to drop by to speak with him.

Areas Of Interest:

  • Fundamental Physics of Turbulent Flows
  • Scientific Computing
  • Star Formation and the Physics of the Interstellar Medium
  • Type Ia Supernovae

Selected Publications:

Selected Recent Publications
  • PS Li, C. McKee, R. Klein, R. Fisher, Sub-Alfvenic Non-Ideal MHD Turbulence Simulations with Ambipolar Diffusion: I. Turbulence Statistics, The Astrophysical Journal, 684:380-394, 2008. (astro-ph)


  • A. Arneodo, R. Benzi, J. Berg, L. Biferale, E. Bodenschatz, A. Busse, E. Calzavarini, B. Castaing, M. Cencini, L. Chevillard, R. Fisher, R. Grauer, H. Homann, D. Lamb, A.S. Lanotte, E. Leveque, B. Luethi, J. Mann, N. Mordant, W.-C. Mueller, S. Ott, N.T. Ouellette, J.-F. Pinton, S. B. Pope, S.G. Roux, F. Toschi, H. Xu, P.K. Yeung, Universal Intermittent Properties of Particles in Highly-Turbulent Flows, Physical Review Letters, Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 254504, 2008. (ADS)


  • G. C. Jordan IV, R. T. Fisher, D. M. Townsley, A. C. Calder, C. Graziani, S. Asida, D. Q. Lamb, and J. W. Truran, Three-Dimensional Simulations of the Deflagration Phase of the Gravitationally-Confined Detonation Model of Type Ia Supernovae, The Astrophysical Journal, 681:1448–1457, 2008. (ADS)   (doi)


  • R. Benzi, L. Biferale, R. T. Fisher, L. P. Kadanoff, D. Q. Lamb, and F. Toschi, Intermittency and Universality in Fully-Developed Inviscid and Weakly-Compressible Turbulent Flows, Physical Review Letters, 100, 234503-07, 2008. (ADS)
    (doi)


  • R. Crockett, P. Colella, R. T. Fisher, R. I. Klein, C. F. McKee, An Unsplit, Cell-Centered Godunov Method for Ideal MHD, Journal of Computational Physics, 203, 422-448, 2005. (ADS)   (doi)


  • R. T. Fisher, A Turbulent Interestellar Medium Origin of the Binary Period Distribution, The Astrophysical Journal, 600:769–780, 2004. (ADS)   (doi)


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Edit Profile Last Updated on Wednesday, November 26, 2008

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