Jeffrey Robert Hammel

Plasma Theory and Simulation Group
Department of Electrical Engineering
University of California at Berkeley

Computational Experience:
Scientific Computation
Expertise in solving linear and nonlinear differential and algebraic equations computationally with emphasis on computational geometry, data processing, computational and memory efficiency.
Languages and APIs:

Linux System Administrator, Plasma Theory and Simulation Group, 2001-present
Managed a cluster of seven computers, including a web server (Apache), mail server, network file system (NFS), linux installation, password management, and ssh access. The computers are used for scientific computing by the Plasma Theory and Simulation Group.
Familiarity with:

Research Experience:
Plasma Theory and Simulation Group, Electrical Engineering, UC Berkeley, 8/2001-Present -- Graduate Student Researcher -- The Plasma Theory and Simulation Group focuses on analytic and computational modeling of plasma devices using first principle techniques. Plasma resonances are investigated with the interest in developing low-power high-density devices. Using a wave coinciding with a natural mode of the system allows for large-area reactors to be conceived. Another topic of research is the computational characterization of DC discharges for plasma processing use. The Particle-In-Cell (PIC) method with Monte Carlo collisions allows for a fully kinetic characterization of DC discharge devices. Movies of moving striations are available at http://langmuir.nuc.berkeley.edu/~jhammel.

Computational Gas and Plasmadynamics Laboratory, Mechanical Engineering, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 6/2000-8/2001 -- Graduate Student Researcher -- Work included developement of a finite volume Poisson solver on unstructured tetrahedral meshes and addition of degrees of freedom to a DSMC gasdynamics simulation program. The Poisson solver was merged with the program with additional modifcations to create a Vlasov-Poisson PIC code on unstructured meshes.

Teaching Experience:
Instructor, Part Time, Art Institute of California in San Francisco, January 2006-present -- Duties include teaching undegraduates in the Visual and Game Programming department the essentials of computer science. Courses taught include Operating Systems and Shell Scripting (Winter 2006) and Design Patterns and Data Structures (Spring 2006).

Graduate Student Instructor, c/o Professor Verboncoeur, UC Berkeley, Spring 2006, E170B: Introduction to Modeling and Simulation II -- Duties include designing and giving the lectures, designing homework assignments, teaching Matlab/octave fundamentals, and presenting engineering and computational sides of simulations.

Graduate Student Mentor, SUPERB program, c/o Professor Birdsall, UC Berkeley, Summer 2003 -- The SUPERB program invites graduates to participate in cross-disciplinary research under the advice of a professor and graduate student mentor.

Graduate Student Instructor, c/o Professor Gustafson, UC Berkeley, 8/2001-12/2001, EE117: Electromagentics -- duties included the organization of discussion sections, laboratory supervision, solution preparation, and additional office hours to aid students. Two discussion sections were held per week in which new and supplementary material was presented to students. Laboratory experiments were demonstrated weekly in class.

Education:
University of California at Berkeley, 8/2001-present
Ph. D., Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
GPA: 3.75

Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 6/2000-8/2001
Master of Science, Mechanical Engineering
GPA: 3.9

Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 8/96-5/2000
Bachelor of Science, Mechanical Engineering
GPA: 3.1

Lab Experience:
Microfabrication Technology (UC Berkeley EE143 Lab), Fall 2002 -- Labwork consisted of manufacturing and testing of a microelectronic chip. Familiarity with technologies such as photoresists, lithography, wet etching, and deposition was gained through use of the appropriate equipment. Testing of the electronic and MEMS chip components was done through four point probes.

NASA Glenn Research Center, Summer 1999 -- Worked as part of research efforts of WPI to characterize the performance of a pulsed plasma thruster using triple Langmuir probes in a large vacuum chamber. Duties included computer programming, technical writing and reporting, instrument calibration, and data analysis.

Publications:
J. Hammel, K. Kovalev, N. A. Gatsonis, `` Unstructured Adaptive Monte Carlo Simulations of Flows in Micronozzles '', AIAA Paper 2001-2891, presented at the 35th AIAA Thermophysics Conference, Anaheim, CA, June, 2001.

Jason R. Potts, Stephen W. Pierson, Paul P. Mathisen, Jeff R. Hammel, Vlad C. Babau, `` Wind Energy Resource Asessment of Western and Central Massachusetts '', AIAA Paper 2001-0060, 2001.

Awards:
National Merit Scholar, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1996-2000.

Activities:
Electrical Engineering Graduate Student Organization, UC Berkeley, officer, 8/2002-2003.
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics WPI student branch, Secretary, 6/1999-6/2000.
WPI Science Fiction Society, member, 1996-2001.