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词条 David J. Pine
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  1. References

{{multiple issues|{{COI|date=January 2019}}{{BLP sources|date=January 2019}}{{third-party|date=January 2019}}
}}David J. Pine is an American physicist who has made contributions in the field of soft matter physics, including studies on colloids, polymers, surfactant systems, and granular materials. He is Professor of Physics in the NYU College of Arts and Science and Chair of the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering.[1][2]

A professor of physics and founding director of the Center for Soft Matter Research at New York University (NYU), Pine is one of the original developers of diffusing-wave spectroscopy,[3][4] an optical technique that has proven useful to study colloid systems. Pine also has a longstanding interest in colloidal self-assembly and in the development of a broad range of colloids for these purposes, including colloidal templating,[5] colloidal clusters,[6] lock-and-key colloids,[7] and patchy colloids with valence.[8] He also discovered Random Organization,[9] a nonequilibrium phase transition[10] in which the hydrodynamic reversibility of slow flows breaks down.

Pine has published over 150 articles and has received numerous fellowships and honors. In 2000, his work was recognized with the Society of Rheology Publication of the Year Award. He was a Guggenheim Fellow (1999-2000) and is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2018), the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2000), and the American Physical Society (1997).

Prior to working at NYU, Pine was a professor in the Chemical Engineering Department and the Materials Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) for 10 years; he served as chair of the Chemical Engineering Department from 2001 to 2004. He also worked as a research scientist at Exxon Corporate Research in Annandale, New Jersey, and was on the physics faculty at Haverford College near Philadelphia.

Pine received his B.S. in Physics and Mathematics in 1975 from Wheaton College, and his Ph.D. in Physics in 1982 from Cornell University.

References

1. ^http://engineering.nyu.edu/people/david-pine
2. ^http://www.physics.nyu.edu/pine/Home.html
3. ^G. Maret, P. E. Wolf, “Multiple light scattering from disordered media. The effect of Brownian motion of scatterers,” Z. Phys. B 65, 409-413 (1987).
4. ^D. Pine, D. Weitz, P. Chaikin, and E. Herbolzheimer, “Diffusing-wave spectroscopy,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 60, 1134–1137 (1988).
5. ^A. Imhof and D. J. Pine, “Ordered Macroporous Materials by Emulsion Templating,” Nature 389, 948–951 (1997).
6. ^V. N. Manoharan, M. T. Elsesser and D. J. Pine, “Dense packing and symmetry in small clusters of microspheres,” Science 301, 483–487 (2003).
7. ^S. Sacanna, W. T. M. Irvine, P. M. Chaikin, and D. J. Pine, “Lock and key colloids,” Nature 464, 575–578 (2010).
8. ^Y. Wang, Y. Wang, D. R. Breed, V. N. Manoharan, L. Feng, A. D. Hollingsworth, M. Weck and D. J. Pine, “Colloids with valence and specific directional bonding,” Nature 491, 51–55 (2012).
9. ^D. J. Pine, J. P. Gollub, J. F. Brady, and A. M. Leshansky, “Chaos and threshold for irreversibility in sheared suspensions,” Nature 438, 997–1000 (2005)
10. ^L. Corte, P. M. Chaikin, J. P. Gollub, and D. J. Pine, “Random organization in periodically driven systems,” Nature Physics 4, 420–424 (2008)
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11 : Living people|21st-century American physicists|New York University faculty|Guggenheim Fellows|Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science|Fellows of the American Physical Society|University of California, Santa Barbara faculty|Wheaton College (Illinois) alumni|Cornell University alumni|Polytechnic Institute of New York University faculty|Year of birth missing (living people)

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