Canadian mathematician
Anne Bourlioux is a Canadian mathematician whose research involves the numerical simulation of turbulent combustion . She is a winner of the Richard C. DiPrima Prize ,[ 1] and a professor of mathematics and statistics at the Université de Montréal .[ 2]
She is also a former rugby player for the Berkeley All Blues,[ 3] and a
Canadian national champion and world record holder in indoor rowing .[ 4] [ 5] [ 6]
Education
Bourlioux earned her Ph.D. in 1991 at Princeton University . Her dissertation, Numerical Studies of Unstable Detonations , was supervised by Andrew Majda .[ 7] She was a Miller Research Fellow at the University of California, Berkeley from 1991 to 1993.[ 8]
Academic recognition
Bourlioux won the Richard C. DiPrima Prize in 1992.[ 1]
She was a keynote speaker at the 2006 Spring Technical Meeting of the Combustion Institute/Canadian Section, speaking on multiscale modeling of turbulent combustion.[ 9]
Selected publications
References
^ a b "SIAM: The Richard C. DiPrima Prize" , www.siam.org , retrieved 2018-12-09
^ Bourlioux, Anne , Université de Montréal , retrieved 2018-12-09
^ "Anne Bourlioux" , 2011 CrossFit Games , retrieved 2018-12-09
^ Anne Bourlioux sets two World Records with RowPro , Digital Rowing, January 3, 2012
^ Halnon, Jameson (June 22, 2017), Breaking Age Group Records Again and Again... , Concept2
^ Indoor rowing participants confirmed for World Games , World Rowing, May 18, 2017
^ Anne Bourlioux at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
^ Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science: celebrating 50 years (PDF) , p. 8
^ "Anne Bourlioux keynote" , 2006 Spring Technical Meeting of the Combustion Institute/Canadian Section , retrieved 2018-12-09
International National Academics