Joran Rolland did his undergraduate study in physics in école normale supérieure in Paris, and his PhD in fluid mechanics in ladhyx in école polytechnique. He performed research and taught in several institutions (to a French and international audience), such as Frankfurt university, or école normale supérieure de Lyon, before joining école centrale Lille and the Laboratory of fluid mechanics in Lille. His reseach interests involve atmospheric and wall turbulence, where he studied multistability of coherent structures using dedicated numerical and analytical methods. He teaches mathematics, computer programming, numerical analysis and computational fluid dynamics.”
Jean-Marc Foucaut is Professor at Centrale Lille since 2014. He has worked in PIV development dedicated to TBL for 25 years. His main topics of research are near wall turbulence, flow control and optical metrology for measurement. He has developed a specific knowledge about the PIV optimization for the study of turbulent flow in term of accuracy and spatial resolution. He has participated in 10 European and 7 French ANR projects. He is responsible for experimental activities related to the LMFL large-scale TBL wind tunnel. he had supervised 13 completed PhD theses and 3 in progress, had published 74 peer-review papers. He is co-director of the master program and teaches the fluid dynamics and experimental technics modules.
J. Christos Vassilicos has been Chair Professor of Fluid Mechanics at Imperial college London from 2001 until 2019 where he was also Founding Director of Imperial’s Centre for Doctoral Training in Fluid Dynamics Across Scales from 2013 to 2019. He moved to France as Directeur de Recherche at the CNRS in 2019. J. Vassilicos had supervised 35 completed PhD theses and supervised 15 post-docs, had published 150 papers in top international journals and had 6 families of granted patents. He was granted of several European Grants including two prestigious European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Investigator Grant in 2013 and 2022. He is a world expert on turbulence and now teaches the core turbulence modules of the Masters.
Antoine Dazin (Ph.D in 2003) is Professor at Arts et Métiers, Campus of Lille. In the last 20 years, he (co-)authored 36 accepted papers in international journals and 1 book chapter. He has supervised 9 PhD Thesis and is currently supervising 5 other PhD. He has coordinated several research projects, among which a European H2020 Cleansky Project and several research activities with industrial partners. He is a member of the executive board of Euroturbo, the European Turbomachinery Society. He is specialist in experimental analysis, modelling and flow control of the turbomachinery internal flows.
Francesco Romanò (Ph.D in 2016) is an Associate Professor at Arts et Métiers, Campus of Lille. In the last 7 years, he gave 24 invited talks, (co-)authored 48 among published and accepted papers in international journals and 1 book chapter. He currently supervises 7 PhD students funded by ENSAM and CSC scholarships, as well as he is PI of a French ANR project. His research topics include mixing in cavities, chaos theory, multiphase flows in microfluidic systems, biological flows, non-Newtonian flows, thermo- and soluto-capillary flows, stability analysis, mathematical modelling of complex multiscale systems and, recently, flow control and turbomachinery.
Jean-Philippe Laval is Director of Research (senior researcher) at CNRS (LMFL). He is the director of the Fluid Mechanics Laboratory of Lille (LMFL). His primary areas of scientific research are: turbulence theory, wall turbulence, subgrid scale modelling, and high performance computing of turbulent flows (direct and large eddy simulations). He has supervised 10 completed doctoral students and 6 post-docs . He is co-author of 50 peer-review articles Dr. Laval has been the principal investigator of several HPC projects and has participated to many National and European collaborative research projects He has been Expert in the Scientific Commitee of the French Computing Angency (GENCI) from 2014 to 2020.
Mickaël Bourgoin (PhD 2003, CNRS Research Director at LEGI 2012 & Physics Lab at ENS de Lyon 2016) has worked in the field of single phase and multi-phase turbulence for the past 20 years. His main topics of research focus on the transport properties of turbulence in particular for the case of inertial particles. He is expert in high resolution Lagrangian methodology and Lagrangian modelling of turbulence. He is director of the French National Research Network for Turbulence « Navier Stokes 2.00 ». He served as PI and axis leader in 2 European projects, as local PI in 3 ANR projects and was PI of a large transdisciplinary Breakthrough project within IDEXLyon. He was awarded the young scientist Euromech Prize (2009) and the Prix ONERA/Académie des Sciences (2022). He teaches the module ’Turbulent Transport’ of the master.
D. Marx
David Marx obtained an engineer’s diploma and a Ph.D. degree (2003) from Ecole Centrale de Lyon, France. He is currently a CNRS researcher at Pprime Institute. He has been working in thermoacoustics and in aeroacoustics. His main present research interest concerns the numerical simulation of acoustic wave damping in turbulent channel flows.
J.C. Valière
Jean-Christophe Valière received the Ph.D. degree in acoustics from the University of Le Mans, France, in 1991. He is currently a Professor at the University of Poitiers, France, since 1999. His research concerns the signal processing for acoustics and fluid mechanics. This last two decades, his interest has been focused on the development of signal processing techniques to acoustic particle velocity measurement using Laser Doppler Velocimetry or Particle Image Velocimetry and their applications for non-linear acoustics and aeroacoustics. Recently, he is involved in archeoacoustic studies concerning acoustic potteries in medieval churches. He is currently IEEE, SFA, EEA member.
G. Lehnasch
Guillaume Lehnasch has a background in mechanical engineering and has obtained his Ph.D. in 2005 at Poitiers, France. Since 2009, he teaches as an assistant professor at ISAE-ENSMA (Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Mécanique Aérotechnique), mainly in compressible fluid dynamics, aerodynamics and computational fluid dynamics. He is specialized in high-fidelity simulations of supersonic flows involving shock / turbulence / combustion interactions in situations representative of flows going from massflowmeter of high-pressure gases to supersonic nozzle exhaust or scramjet engines.
Peter Jordan, born in Cork, Ireland, in 1974, is a CNRS Research Director at the PPRIME Institute, Poitiers, France. He holds B.A. and B.A.I. degrees, in Mathematics and Mecanical Engineering, respectively, from Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. He received his Ph.D. from Trinity College Dublin in 2000.
G. Ladizel
Gildas Ladizel is assistant professor at ISAE-ENSMA / P’ Institute in Poitiers, France since 2006. He hold a bachelor in Physics, a master in Fluid Mechanics and Turbulent Flow obtained in 2001 from Rouen University, and received his PhD in 2004 in turbulence research from Rouen University. His research activities concern experimental Turbulence Heat Transfer and non intrusive temperature metrology development in flows (PLIF, micro-thermocouples, ZnO Phosphorescence, …). He teaches Statistical Physics and Radiative Heat Transfer in ISAE-ENSMA.