14 | FAC U LTY A N D STA F F
AFFILIATED FACULTY
(continued)
CLAUDIO REBBI
ANDRE SHARON
Professor and Chair (2008-2011), Physics; Director, Center for Computational Science
Professor, ME; Director, Fraunhofer Center for Manufacturing Innovation
Computational methods applied to the study of quantum chromodynamics (QCD, the theory of interacting quarks and gluons) • PhD, Università degli Studi di Torino, Italy
Electromechanical machine design, control, automation, biotech/biomedial instrumentation, devices, and rapid microdiagnostics platforms • PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Techonology, 1988 H. EUGENE STANLEY
SIDNEY REDNER
Professor, Physics
Professor and Chair (2011- ), Physics
Statistical physics of materials
Non-equilibrium statistical physics of materials
• PhD, Harvard University, 1967
• PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1977 JOHN STRAUB BJORN REINHARD
Professor and Chair, Chemistry
Associate Professor, Chemistry
Theoretical and computational chemistry and biophysics
Photophysical properties of nanoparticles and the applications of these nanoparticles to biological sensors and devices • Dr. rer. nat., Technical University Kaiserslautern, Germany, 2003 ANDERS SANDVIK
Professor, Physics Computational research on interacting quantum many-body systems • PhD, University of California, Santa Barbara, 1993
DANIEL SEGRE
Assistant Professor, BME, Bioinformatics and Biology Evolutionary dynamics of biological networks, in particular in the interplay between response to genetic and environmental perturbations, genomiclevel functional organization, and optimal adaptation. • PhD, Weizmann Institute of Science, 2002
Annual Report 2010–2011
• PhD, Columbia University, 1987
BELA SUKI
Professor, BME Biomechanics of tissues and extracellular matrix, the ensemble behavior of complex biological systems, nonlinearities in biological systems • PhD, Jozsef Attila University (Hungary), 1987
JOE TIEN
Associate Professor, BME Biological materials, microvascular tissue engineering; microvascular physiology; hydrogels • PhD, Harvard University, 1999