
Eric Darve
Professor Darve received his Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics at the Jacques-Louis Lions Laboratory in the Pierre et Marie Curie University, Paris, France. His advisor was Prof. Olivier Pironneau, and his Ph.D. thesis was entitled "Fast Multipole Methods for Integral Equations in Acoustics and Electromagnetics." He was previously a student at the Ecole Normale Supérieure, rue d'Ulm, Paris, in Mathematics and Computer Science.
Prof. Darve became a postdoctoral scholar with Profs. Moin and Pohorille at Stanford and NASA Ames in 1999 and joined the faculty at Stanford University in 2001. He is a member of the Institute for Computational and Mathematical Engineering.
Prof. Darve has received many awards, including the H. Julian Allen Award, NASA (2010), the Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches, France (2007), the Leslie Fox Prize in Numerical Analysis, IMA (2001), and the James H. Clark Faculty Scholar, Stanford University (2001).
His research areas include numerical linear algebra, high-performance and parallel computing, GPGPU, machine learning for engineering, surrogate and reduced order modeling, stochastic inversing, and anomaly detection for manufacturing.