
Vallorie Peridier
Bio [2005]
Vallorie Peridier is an associate professor of mechanical engineering
at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She is interested
in computational methods of engineering mathematics for diverse
applications: prior studies include Lagrangian methods for unsteady
separation (fluid mechanics) and quantum filtering of electron
emission, both at nanoscale point and at contact junctions.
Vallorie's training includes a B.S. in physics (Bryn Mawr College) and
a Ph.D. in engineering mathematics (Lehigh University). She worked in
industry before joining academia, first for AT&T (information systems)
and then for PP&L (nuclear plant engineering).
Vallorie's favorite activity is dancing (English
country dancing, Scottish country dancing, waltz, hambo, and
Argentine tango).
Project Title
Calculating the 1D Inverse Problem for Surface Heating
Project

This project considered a classic 1D inverse thermal-diffusion
problem: can the (unknown) unsteady surface
heating q"(t) be inferred from a timeseries of
temperature measurements T(t) taken a with a thermocouple
buried a distance, say r, from the surface?
A principal objective of the study was to see how successfully one
could represent dimensioned, continuum physical systems using the
Boolean strategies employed in NKS modeling. Using an NKS modeling
strategy, is it then possible to make predictions about physically
measurable quantities?
The results of this study are preliminary but very encouraging. Using
a basic NKS-style energy propagation model based on rule 226, and a
few scaling (Buckingham-Pi) concepts, agreement within 30% of the
"exact" (PDE-diffusion equation) solution was achieved for several
sample temperature time-series data, each corresponding to a continuum
surface heating source. Furthermore, surprisingly good estimates of
the surface heating were obtained from noisy data signals as well.
Favorite Four-Color, Nearest-Neighbor, Totalistic Rule

Rule chosen: 570696
I like rules that start off with something scrambled and evolve to
pure propagating phenomena.
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