Urmila Agarwal Ghia is an Indian-American mechanical engineer whose research involves computational fluid dynamics, and who is particularly known for her work on multigrid methods for incompressible flow.[1] She is a professor emerita of mechanical engineering and materials engineering at the University of Cincinnati.[2]

Education and career

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Ghia is originally from northern India, and was encouraged in schooling by her parents. As a way of rebelling against tradition, she chose engineering over a career in medicine, and became a student at the University of Bombay despite heavy pressure to give up her spot there in favor of a male student.[3] She graduated with a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering in 1965,[4] although by 1964 she had already traveled to Chicago to begin her graduate studies at the Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT).[3]

She earned a master's degree at IIT in 1967 and completed her PhD there in 1971.[3] Her doctoral dissertation was Incremental L2-norm stability of systems governed by nonlinear partial differential equations.[5] At IIT, she met her husband, Kirti Ghia, an aerospace engineer from Bombay. Together, after finishing their degrees, they took faculty positions at the University of Cincinnati.[3]

At Cincinnati, Ghia became director of the computational fluid dynamics laboratory,[2][3] and in 1995 founded the university's Women in Science and Engineering program.[3][6] She was acting vice provost for academic affairs in 1994–1995, and chair of the Department of Mechanical, Industrial, and Nuclear Engineering from 1995 to 2000, and chair of the Fluids Engineering Division of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in 2007.[4]

Recognition

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Ghia is an ASME Fellow, elected in 2013.[7] She is also a Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.[4]

She was a 2006 winner of the MMAE Distinguished Alumni Award of the Illinois Institute of Technology.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Ghia, U; Ghia, K.N; Shin, C.T (December 1982), "High-Re solutions for incompressible flow using the Navier–Stokes equations and a multigrid method", Journal of Computational Physics, 48 (3): 387–411, Bibcode:1982JCoPh..48..387G, doi:10.1016/0021-9991(82)90058-4
  2. ^ a b "Ghia, Urmila PhD", UC Directory, University of Cincinnati, retrieved 2022-12-24
  3. ^ a b c d e f Chalifoux, Amanda (October 2009), "Engineering her destiny: India native's career sets example for aspiring female scientists", UC Magazine, University of Cincinnati, retrieved 2022-12-24
  4. ^ a b c d "Alumni recognition awards: Professor Urmila Ghia", Vectors, Illinois Institute of Technology, p. 20, 2007, retrieved 2022-12-24 – via Yumpu
  5. ^ Worldcat catalog entry for Incremental L2-norm stability of systems governed by nonlinear partial differential equations, retrieved 2022-12-24
  6. ^ McAfee, Katy (September 23, 2020), "UC program dedicated to closing the gender gap", The News Record, retrieved 2022-12-24
  7. ^ All Fellows (PDF), ASME, 2022, retrieved 2022-12-24