Michael P. Marder
Professor
Center for Mechanics of Solids, Structures and Materials
Texas A and M University
United States of America
Biography
Michael Marder is a member of the Center for Nonlinear Dynamics, internationally known for its experiments on chaos and pattern formation, and for many years ranked #1 in the nation by US News and World Report. He is involved in a wide variety of theoretical, numerical, and experimental investigations, ranging from studies of plasticity and phase transformations to experiments on sand ripples at the sea bottom. He specializes in the mechanics of solids, particularly the fracture of brittle materials. He has developed numerical methods allowing fracture computations on the atomic scale to be compared directly with laboratory experiments on a macroscopic scale. He is employing these methods to study the production of natural gas from hydrofractured shale. He has also published two textbooks, one a graduate text on Condensed Matter Physics, and the other an undergraduate text on Research Methods for Science.
Research Interest
Dynamic Fracture, Nonlinear Dynamics, Micromechanics
Publications
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Marder M, Hamrock C. Math and Science Outcomes for Students of Teachers from Standard and Alternative Pathways in Texas. Science. 2016 Nov 29;126:27.
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Boettcher EJ, Ihas GG, Reghu M, Heeger AJ. Oscillations in resistivity of an organic polymer at low temperatures. Czechoslovak Journal of Physics. 1996 May 1;46:2605-6.
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Patzek T, Male F, Marder M. A simple model of gas production from hydrofractured horizontal wells in shales. AAPG Bulletin. 2014;98(12):2507-29.