Saturday, December 28, 2024

 A Perfect Celebration

On December 5-7, 2024, a symposium, Emerging Trends in Computational Fluid Dynamics: Towards Industrial Applications, was successfully held at Stanford University to celebrate the 90th birthday of CFD legend, Professor Antony Jameson. I am very grateful to Antony for giving Professor Chongam Kim and myself an opportunity to celebrate our 60th birthday in conjunction with his. Thus, the symposium is also called the Jameson-Kim-Wang (JKW) symposium.

An organizing committee led by Professor Siva Nadarajah (McGill University) and composed of Professors Chunlei Liang (Clarkson University), Meilin Yu (UMBC), and Hojun You (Sejong University) did a fantastic job in organizing a flawless symposium. The list of speakers includes the who's who and rising stars in CFD. A special shoutout goes to Professor Juan Alonso and the sponsors for their support of the Symposium.  A photo of the attendees is shown in Figure 1. Some good-looking posters from the sponsors are shown in Figure 2.

Figure 1. Attendees of the JKW Symposium

Figure 2. Posters from some of the sponsors

Antony's many pioneering contributions to CFD have been well documented in the literature. His various CFD and design optimization codes have shaped the design of commercial aircraft for many decades. Several aircraft manufacturers told stories about Antony's impact. We look forward to the release of the Symposium videos next year. 

Next, I'd like to touch upon my personal connection to Antony. I first heard of his name and his work in China from my graduate advisor, Academician Zhang Hanxin. I still recall reading his paper on the successes and challenges in computational aerodynamics. I believe I first met Antony at an AIAA conference when he came to my talk on conservative Chimera. I did not get an opportunity to introduce myself. Our 2nd meeting took place in China during an Asian CFD conference in 2000 where both of us were invited speakers. We sat at the same table with Charlotte (Mrs. Jameson) in a banquet. This time I was able to properly introduce myself. 

Soon after that, we started collaborating on high-order methods, from spectral difference to flux reconstruction. I visited Antony's lab and co-organized his 70th birthday celebration at Stanford in late 2004. During a visit to his home, Antony shared his fascination on the aerodynamics of hummingbirds. I still recall receiving his phone call about proving the stability of the SD method with Gauss points as the flux points on a Saturday when I was at my son's soccer game! 

The Symposium also gave me an opportunity to see many of my former students, some of whom I have not seen for more than two decades: Yanbing, Khyati, Prasad, Chunlei, Varun, Takanori, Meilin, Lei, Cheng, Feilin, Eduardo and Justin. It is very gratifying to hear their stories after so many years.

Figure 3. Group photo after a great dinner

The Symposium concluded with an amazing banquet. My friend and collaborator, H.T. Huynh, did a hilarious roast of me and I cannot stop laughing the whole time. H.T. has the talent of a standup comedian. Everything went smoothly and we had a perfect symposium!