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Ponencias Semana de Ingeniería IIT y CU

Se asignara un punto parcial por cada conferencia a la que se asista y se entregue un resumen.

Lunes 17 de septiembre 11-12 hrs. Ciudad Universitaria

Nombre del ponente: Dr. Andreas Gross

Nombre de la conferencia: Numerical Investigation of Turbulent Shock Wave Boundary Layer


Interactions.

Resumen de la conferencia: Shock wave turbulent boundary layer interactions can occur in both
internal and external supersonic flows. Accurate predictions of the associated unsteady aerothermal
loads would allow for lighter and/or more efficient designs. Such predictions have to be grounded in a
detailed understanding of the underlying flow physics. Simulations that reveal the unsteady fluid
dynamics can contribute to the physical understanding. Large-eddy simulalations and hybrid turbulence
model simulations of unswept and swept interactions were carried out for momentum thickness
Reynolds numbers at separation of approximately 4,000. The simulations reveal a low-frequency
unsteadiness at separation and a broad-band high-frequency unsteadiness at reattachment.
Pronounced ripples of the separation shock are observed for the unswept interaction. When a
freestream cross flow component is added to simulate an infi nite swept interaction, the ripples
disappear. Simulations of a fi nite swept interaction display conical symmetry and spanwise structures in
the interaction region that are slowly traveling away from the symmetry plane.

Breve resumen del curriculum del ponente:

Ph.D., University of Aachen, 2002.

Research Interests :Computational Fluid Dynamics, Direct Numerical Simulations, Implicit Large Eddy
Simulations, Hybrid Turbulence Modeling, High-Performance Computing, Chemical Non-Equilibrium
Flows, Flow Control, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, Renewable Energy.
Current Projects “Numerical Investigation of Turbulent Junction Flows,” Air Force Research Lab,
09/13/17-12/13/19

“A Local Analysis of the Fluid Dynamics and Flow Physics of Dynamic Stall on Helicopters,” Army
Research Office, 06/01/15-10/31/18

“Collaborative Research: Numerical/Experimental Investigation of Solar Chimney Power Plants,”


National Science Foundation, 07/15/15-06/30/19

“Numerical Investigation of 3D Shock Boundary Layer Interactions,” Air Force Office of Scientific
Research, University of Arizona subcontract, 02/01/16-08/31/18

“Development of Research Environment for Solar-Assisted Autonomous Soaring,” EPSCoR RID,


05/22/18-05/04/19
Lunes 17 de septiembre 12-13 hrs. Ciudad Universitaria
Nombre del ponente: Dr. Jesus Rosales Rosales

Nombre de la conferencia: Solar-Powered Uninhabited Aerial Vehicle for Autonomous Soaring.

Resumen de la conferencia: A solar-powered uninhabited aerial vehicle (UAV) with 12.7ft wingspan has
been built and is presently being tested. Important design drivers were the use of low-cost commercial
off-the-shelf components and manufacturing techniques. The design objective was to obtain a light-
weight but structurally sound aircraft for solar-assisted soaring. An Arduino-based power meter was
designed to measure the performance of the aircraft's solar panels. An endurance ground test was
carried out to evaluate the performance and reliability of the solar panels, the charge controller, and the
electronic speed controller. A six degrees of freedom point mass model was implemented that will be
used for the development and testing of solar-assisted autonomous soaring control algorithms.

Breve resumen del curriculum del ponente:

Ph.D., NMSU.

BS in Aerospace Engineering, NMSU 2014.

BS in Aerospace Engineering, University of Chihuahua (UACH) 2016.

MS in Mechanical Engineering, NMSU 2017.

Graduate Teaching Assistant, NMSU, August 2016-May 2018.

Graduate Research Assistant, NMSU, January 2017-present.


Lunes 17 de septiembre 13-14 hrs. Ciudad Universitaria
Nombre del ponente: Dr. Liang Sun

Nombre de la conferencia: Autonomy of Heterogeneous Unmanned Systems - Research and Teaching.

Resumen de la conferencia: This presentation gives an overview of the research projects conducted in
the Autonomous Systems Laboratory (ASL) in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (MAE) Department
at New Mexico State University (NMSU). The ASL research spectrum covers sensing, tasking, guidance,
and control in the autonomy architecture. A novel sound source localization technique will be first
introduced that uses only two self-rotating microphones to localize sound sources in a 3D environment.
Then, a fast and scalable task allocation algorithm will be introduced that completes task assignment in
a polynomial complexity level. In addition, a cooperative guidance and control kinematic model will be
introduced that only depends on relative motions among vehicles and can be used for cooperative
control, target tracking, and obstacle avoidance. In the end, the two classes in the curriculum for
robotics and control in the MAE department will be briefly introduced.

Breve resumen del curriculum del ponente:

Liang Sun has served as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering at New Mexico State University (NMSU) since August 2015. He received his Ph.D. degree in
Electrical and Computer Engineering from Brigham Young University in 2012. From April 2013 to August
2015, he was a postdoctoral research fellow for a joint appointment to both the Academy Center for
Unmanned Aircraft Systems Research in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the
US Air Force Academy and the Unmanned Systems Laboratory in the Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering at the University of Texas at San Antonio. He received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in
Automation Science and Electrical Engineering from Beihang University, China, in 2004 and 2007,
respectively. Liang’s research interests include guidance and control of unmanned aerial vehicles and
tethered systems, cooperative control, optimal sensor management, and sound source localization.
Miércoles 19 de septiembre 10-11 hrs. Ciudad Universitaria y Viernes 21 de septiembre 10-11 hrs.
IIT
Nombre del ponente: Dr. Diego Moisés Almazo Pérez

Nombre de la conferencia: La física en la ingeniería espacial.

Resumen de la conferencia: Aún hoy, cuando las ideas de Newton se consideran sólo una parte de un
escenario mucho más extenso, descrito por Einstein, nosotros, los ciudadanos de a pié, seguimos viendo
el mundo con ojos newtonianos. Utilizamos sus leyes tanto para lanzar una pelota como para enviar una
nave al espacio sideral. La velocidad de los cuerpos espaciales es siempre relativa, sabemos que la Luna
describe su órbita alrededor de la Tierra, que la Tierra se mueve alrededor del Sol, el Sol alrededor del
centro de la Vía Láctea y la Vía Láctea se desplaza a su vez. Habría que sumar todas esas velocidades en
un momento dado y, aún así, dado que no existe un centro de referencia absoluto e inmóvil para todos
tampoco existe una velocidad absoluta referida a él. Así pues, seamos prácticos y haré una pregunta ¿A
qué velocidad se mueve la Luna y los satélites artificiales “respecto a la Tierra”?

Breve resumen del curriculum del ponente:

El Dr. Diego Moisés Almazo Pérez es Doctor en Ciencias en Ingeniería Mecánica (Especialidad turbo
maquinaría) por el IPN. Tiene una maestría en Ingeniería aeronáutica con especialidad en
Mantenimiento y producción de aeronaves y licenciatura en Ingeniería Mecánica con especialidad en
energéticos. Ha participado en proyectos con fondos del Instituto de Ciencia y Tecnología
del Distrito Federal y la NASA, entre otros. Ha organizado congresos internacionales como ICADIWT
2017 en la UACJ y ha sido editor de los proceedings. Ha dado conferencias en Universidades de
Alemania, Australia, Brasil, Cuba, Italia, Estados Unidos entre otras y tiene múltiples publicaciones
internaciones en revistas indexadas.
Ha dado clases en el IPN, ITESM y actualmente es Profesor -Investigador en UACJ en las carreras de Ing.
Aeronáutica, Mecánica, y Mecatrónica.

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