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The
faculty and students in the Environmental Fluid Mechanics Laboratory
(EFML) in the Environmental
Fluid Mechanics and Hydrology Program(EFMH) of the Department
of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford
University study turbulence and mixing in natural flows,
natural and forced convection in energy systems, energy and
mass transfer between the ocean and the atmosphere, mesoscale
phenomena in the oceans and surface layers of the atmosphere,
and transport and mixing of pollutants at regional and global
scales in the atmosphere.
Research in the EFML employs both experiments and
numerical simulations. The EFML has six major experimental research
facilities, including a rotating table, a flume for studying the
hydrodynamics of benthic bivalve feeding, two wave flumes, and a
stratified flow facility. Numerical simulations are run on a Cray
mini-supercomputer and Silicon Graphics workstations. The EFML is
also the home site of the Peter
A. McCuen Environmental Computing Center for high performance
computing to enable real-world predictions as a basis for design,
decision-making, and action to preserve and enhance our environment. |