Matthew Juniper
Researcher
Energy, Fluid Mechanics and Turbomachinery
Cambridge University
United Kingdom
Biography
Dr Matthew P. Juniper is a Professor in the Engineering Department of the University of Cambridge, U.K. He studied Natural Sciences Part 1 (1994) and Engineering Part 2 (1997) at the University of Cambridge and received his M.S (1998) and PhD (2001) from the Ecole Centrale de Paris. After a period as a consultant at McKinsey & Co. (2002-2003) he joined the University of Cambridge as a lecturer (2003) and fellow of Trinity College (2006). His research interests include nonlinearity and non-normality in thermoacoustic systems, local and global stability analyses of hydrodynamic flows, and adjoint-based methods for optimization and continuation analysis.
Research Interest
Matthew Juniper's research is in the broad area of flow instability, encompassing hydrodynamic instability and thermoacoustic instability. This research is inspired by developments in the analysis of nonlinear dynamical systems and the analysis of linear stability with adjoint methods. Its broad aim it to take concepts that have been proven for simple systems and scale them up into tools that can be used in industry.
Publications
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Aguilar, JG and Magri, L and Juniper, MP (2017) Adjoint-based sensitivity analysis of low-order thermoacoustic networks using a wave-based approach. Journal of Computational Physics, 341. pp. 163-181. ISSN 0021-9991
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Jamieson, NP and Juniper, MP (2017) Experimental sensitivity analysis of a linearly stable thermoacoustic system via a pulsed forcing technique. Experiments in Fluids, 58. ISSN 0723-4864
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Ghirardo, G and Juniper, MP and Bothien, MR (2018) The effect of the flame phase on thermoacoustic instabilities. Combustion and Flame, 187. pp. 165-184. ISSN 0010-2180