Olivier Chazot is professor and head of the Aeronautics and Aerospace Department at the Von Karman Institute for Fluid Dynamics (VKI). He is an expert in hypersonic aerothermodynamics. His research activities cover ground testing strategy in high enthalpy facilities and plasma wind tunnels for aerospace re-entry missions, modeling development, and CFD validation. He specifically studies laminar to turbulent transition in hypersonic regime and gas-surface interactions on TPS in reacting flows. His main research focus is the duplication of real-flight conditions in ground testing facilities. He participated in multiple ESA missions for the development of flight experiments like the Mars Express mission, EXPERT probe, IXV and Space Rider programs, and QARMAN re-entry CubeSat.
People Category: Webinars
Alex Neefus
Alex Neefus is the VP of Public Sector Solution Architecture at Nvidia. Alex leads the solution architecture teams that covers DOD, System Integrators, embedded processing, High Performance Computing, Civilian and Intelligence agencies for NVIDIA. He and his team are responsible for applying NVIDIA technology, to accelerate customer mission objectives. He and his team work closely with NVIDIA’s GPU, CPU and networking hardware teams, as well as the software SDK development teams in NVIDIA engineering, to bring the requirements of industry back to engineering and shape the next generation of products.
Alex came to Nvidia in 2021 through the acquisition of Mellanox Technologies where we worked the 11 years prior. Alex’s background includes design validation, software development for communication and streaming middleware products. His personal technical focus has been on interconnect and high-performance networking designs. Alex was a contributor to the development of the Infiniband™ standard. He has been the lead network architect on dozens of the world’s most powerful supercomputers. His most recent professional interest is bringing High Performance Computing (HPC) designs to the Embedded System ecosystem, to enable the next generation of edge sensor processing.
Alex holds a B.S. in Computer Science from the University of New Hampshire.
Dev Palmer
Dr. Dev Palmer was named Deputy Director of the Microsystems Technology Office (MTO) in April 2020. Prior to his appointment, he was Chief Technologist at the Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Laboratories, where he directed the independent research and development program and worked with the senior leadership team to define and execute technology strategy.
He served tours as a program manager in MTO from 2012 to 2017 and at the US Army Research Office Electronics Division from 2001 to 2012. In both positions, he directed a portfolio of research and development programs driving innovation for next-generation systems for radio communications, sensing, and electronic warfare. His career in defense-related research and development began at the Microelectronics Center of North Carolina, where he worked on a number of microsystems technologies and applications from 1991 to 2001, ultimately serving as director of the Optical and Electronic Packaging Group.
Palmer earned a Bachelor of Arts in physics and a Master of Science and Doctorate of Philosophy in electrical engineering from Duke University. He was elected Fellow of the IEEE in 2012 “for leadership and contributions in microwave and millimeter wave systems and sources.” His work in guiding research and technology transition for national security has been recognized by the 2010 Army Research Laboratory Award for Program Management, the 2011 Army Superior Civilian Service Medal, the 2013 Secretary of Defense Award for Excellence, and the 2017 DARPA Meritorious Service Medal.
Mahadev Satyanarayanan
Mahadev Satyanarayanan (Satya) is the Carnegie Group University Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. His multi-decade research career has focused on the challenges of performance, scalability, availability and trust in information systems that reach from the cloud to the mobile edge of the Internet.
In the course of this work, he has pioneered many advances in distributed systems, mobile computing, pervasive computing, and the Internet of Things (IoT). His seminal 2009 publication “The Case for VM-based Cloudlets in Mobile Computing” and the ensuing research has led to the emergence of Edge Computing (see “How We Created Edge Computing”). Satya received the PhD in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon, after Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. He is a Fellow of the ACM and the IEEE.
Valerie M. Browning
Dr. Valerie M. Browning is Vice President for Research and Technology within the Corporate Technology Office. In this role, she executes transformational R&D projects working with all business areas, partners in academia, and government S&T organizations. She champions technology collaborations with universities as well as customer R&D and commercial company joint technology development. She chairs the Lockheed Martin’s Technology Council and is responsible for steering transformational cross-enterprise technology programs across all 21st Century Warfare technology domains.
Prior to joining Lockheed Martin, Dr. Browning served as the Acting Director of Defense Research & Engineering for Research & Technology where she provided leadership and coordination across DoD’s S&T enterprise efforts to rapidly develop, mature and protect key technologies and ensure U.S. warfighter dominance. Prior to this role she served as the Director of DARPA’s Defense Sciences Office where she was responsible for the management and execution of a broad portfolio of high-risk, high payoff research initiatives focused on game-changing technologies for U.S. national security.
Dr. Browning has also worked as an independent consultant providing subject matter expertise and strategic planning support to the Department of Defense, Department of Energy, and other government clients in the areas of advanced materials and alternative energy. She also served as Chief Technology Officer for HELM System Solutions, Inc., a woman-owned small research and development business. Early in her career, Valerie served as a program manager in DARPA’s Defense Sciences Office where she initiated and managed a diverse R&D portfolio in areas that included metamaterials, bio-magnetics, unmanned underwater vehicle energy storage, portable power, thermoelectric materials and others. She also worked as a research physicist at the Naval Research Laboratory where her primary areas of research included thermoelectric materials, superconductors, magnetics, and magnetic oxide materials. Dr. Browning earned a doctorate in physics from The Catholic University of America, a Master of Science degree in physics from the University of Maryland, and a Bachelor of Science degree in physics from Virginia Tech.
Gretchen Stewart
Gretchen Stewart is the Chief Data Scientist for Intel’s public sector working closely with Intel’s Ecosystem of software, hardware and partner vendors in developing solutions and programs focused on the convergence of high-performance computing and data analytics. In her solution architecture role, she is building data analytics/ AI/ ML practice within Intel working closely with federal and state government, research institutions, universities, energy, and advanced manufacturing customers. She has been working closely with customers on ethical and responsible AI, building it in and not bolting it on. In enhancing Intel’s ecosystem with these AI solutions and programs, she works with disruptors, start-up and mainstream software vendors to ensure governments, educational institutions and enterprise customers advance the future of research, have competitive advantages, build smarter cities and provided enhanced services to citizens.
She has over 20 years’ experience in the technology sector. Her last position prior to joining Intel was successfully leading the world-wide cross organization team as the Account General Manager for the US Air Force, working closely with AFWA, AFRL and USAF senior leadership to ensure support of the mission. Her extensive knowledge of and leadership experience with product life cycle development and bringing new products to market from conception to sales delivery ensured products were delivered on time and under budget. She has led, motivated and managed server sales team that continually meet or exceeded their sales revenue targets.
She holds a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Wells College and an MBA degree from University of New Hampshire System, along with leadership and branding certifications from Harvard and Dartmouth. She graduated with distinction 9 months, 8 course data analytics program jointly developed by Harvard Business School, Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and Harvard Faculty of Arts and Science in June 2019.
Outside of work, Gretchen is active in mentoring young women starting their careers through Women’s Unlimited in Boston, volunteers locally monitoring water quality, was past Treasurer of the Hanscom Representatives Association. She was co-chair and emcee of the New Horizon AFCEA event in March 2019. Former President of the Lexington-Concord, greater Boston AFCEA chapter, and she is representing industry on the AFCEA International Board striving to promote STEM programs and dialogue with government, industry, and academia.
Christine Darden
Christine Darden (born September 10, 1942, as Christine Mann) is an American mathematician, data analyst, and aeronautical engineer who devoted much of her 40-year career in aerodynamics at NASA to researching supersonic flight and sonic booms. She had an M.S. in mathematics and had been teaching at Virginia State University before starting to work at the Langley Research Center in 1967. She earned a PhD in engineering at George Washington University in 1983 and has published numerous articles in her field. She was the first African-American woman at NASA’s Langley Research Center to be promoted into the Senior Executive Service, the top rank in the federal civil service.
Darden is one of the researchers featured in the book Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race (2016), a history of some of the most influential African-American women mathematicians and engineers at NASA in the mid-20th century, by Margot Lee Shetterly.
In 2019, Darden was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal.
Marlon Sorge
Marlon Sorge is a Technical Fellow for the Space Innovation Directorate of The Aerospace Corporation. Working out of the corporation’s Albuquerque, NM–based office, he supports a wide variety of space debris and space situational awareness–related projects as well as strategic planning, conceptual design, technology development programs and astrodynamics analysis.
For more than 30 years, Mr. Sorge has conducted space debris research and analysis in a broad range of fields including debris risk assessment, fragmentation analysis, operations support, debris mitigation technique implementation, debris event reconstruction, satellite design for debris survivability, orbital and suborbital range and space safety, ballistic debris management, debris environment projection, collision avoidance, orbital reentry prediction, and national and international mitigation guideline and standards development. He developed the Aerospace fragmentation model and conducted some of the first work in realtime fragmentation event risk assessment. He is Executive Director of Aerospace’s Center for Orbital and Reentry Debris Studies (CORDS), is a DOD representative on the NASA delegation to the IADC, and developed the Aerospace fragmentation model. Mr Sorge joined The Aerospace Corporation in 1989.
Cam Murphy
Cam Murphy is the President of FEAM, a family-owned company founded in 1992 out of Los Angeles. The FEAM story began as “F&E Aircraft maintenance” when founder, Fred Murphy and friend Everet started fixing planes at LAX; just two guys and a truck. Today, the company employs over 1,000+ technicians in 30+ airports. FEAM provides maintenance, repair, and other overhaul services to domestic, international, commercial and Cargo Airlines in the US.
Cam Murphy is second generation in his family business. In 2010, after Cam sold his niche aircraft staffing company, he joined FEAM full time. Over the years Cam’s experiences include positions in almost every department, from janitorial services, stockroom clerk, to shadowing technicians on the flight line and various management roles.
Cam has his BA from Texas Christian University (TCU) where he played football followed by an MBA in Aerospace and Defense from the University of Tennessee College of Business. Cam has a Certification for Lean Maintenance repair and Overhaul and was a 2017 Forbes “30 under 30” which recognizes the brightest young entrepreneurs, innovators, and game changers in the US.
Cam also serves on multiple Board of Directors including: The advisory board for University of Tennessee, The Greater Miami Aviation Association, United Way Young Leaders Board of Miami, and the Miami Country Day School.
To give you a window into Cam’s approach to leadership here are a couple of his more famous quotes: “Our customers really are strategic partners. We succeed when they do. That type of strategy and thinking made a huge impact on me,” and “I never want us to lose the culture of treating each other within the organization like family and team members because teams have common goals and win championships. Our common goal is to satisfy our customers and help support their operations.”
Slade Gardner
Bio coming soon.
