Jean Hertzberg
Professor Emeritus
Department of Mechanical Engineering
University of Colorado Boulder
Colleagues,
Thanks for the introduction, Jean, and thanks for your trust—and the trust of the FluidsEd community—in my stewardship!
Perhaps I might begin with my fluid mechanics biosketch. I first studied fluid mechanics as a 4th year student at Penn in 1994/95, and I found it to be one of those courses, like high school physics, that left me seeing the world differently. I would even compare it to 1st grade with Miss Whaley when I learned to read: After learning to read one finds it impossible to see a string of characters without reading the word (or at least trying). After learning fluid mechanics one finds it impossible to see the world without it.
The technical applications of fluid mechanics are endless, and I think the folks on this list might also agree that, beyond the technical applications, there is also abundant beauty. This beauty has been shown many times, not least through Jean’s flow visualization course at CU Boulder. And I would suggest that fluid mechanics goes even deeper: The air we breathe. The tears we cry in moments of joy and pain. The very blood in our veins. Our technical specialty is also the stuff of life.
It has been my privilege to teach undergraduate fluid mechanics for civil engineers at CU Denver since 2005, so I am wrapping up my 21st year and looking forward to the next 21 (an aspiration not a guarantee). My class CVEN-3313 Fluid Mechanics is closer to the applied end of the spectrum. My research group studies environmental hydrology in general and chaotic advection in porous media specifically, which may be closer to the theoretical end of the spectrum (at least among groundwater researchers). Fluid mechanics is a big tent with plenty of space for different perspectives.
I am active in a number of technical organizations (including AEESP, AGU, and InterPore) but, at least thus far, not in the American Physical Society’s Division of Fluid Dynamics (DFD). I would like the long-standing connection between FluidsEd and DFD to continue, so if you are active in both, and you would like to serve as an informal liaison between FluidsEd and DFD, please let me know.
Best wishes to all as we wrap up the current semester and thanks again, Jean. Happy to carry the baton.
Regards,
David
*******************************
David C. Mays, P.E., Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Department of Civil Engineering and Construction
University of Colorado Denver
https://engineering.ucdenver.edu/dmays
he, him, his
*******************************
From: 'Jean Hertzberg' via Fluids Education <fluids-e...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, April 10, 2026 5:58 PM
To: Fluids Education List <fluids-e...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [FluidsEd] New Fluids Ed list manager: David Mays
|
You don't often get email from fluids-e...@googlegroups.com. Learn why this is important |
|
[External Email - Use Caution] |
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Fluids Education" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to
fluids-educati...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/fluids-education/SJ0PR03MB663014C729283ABBDE153683FA592%40SJ0PR03MB6630.namprd03.prod.outlook.com.