List of Purdue University faculty explained
The following is a partial list of Purdue University faculty, including current, former, emeritus, and deceased faculty, and administrators at Purdue University.
Notable faculty
Agriculture
Engineering and technology
- Rakesh Agrawal (Professor of Chemical Engineering) – a winner of National Medal of Technology
- Arden L. Bement Jr. (Professor of Nuclear Engineering) – Director of the National Science Foundation, former Director of NIST
- Lonnie D. Bentley – professor of computer and information technology
- Sabine Brunswicker – associate professor and director of Research Center for Open Digital Innovation (RCODI)
- Jean-Lou Chameau (Professor of Civil Engineering) – President of California Institute of Technology
- Clarence L. "Ben" Coates (Head of the School of Electrical Engineering) – computer scientist and engineer known for his work on waveform recognition devices, circuit gates and accumulators
- Supriyo Datta (Professor of Electrical Engineering) – researcher of nanoelectronics
- Rui de Figueiredo (Professor of Electrical Engineering)
- Charles Alton Ellis (Professor of Structural Engineering) – designer of the Golden Gate Bridge
- Reginald Fessenden (Professor of Electrical Engineering) – first wireless voice transmission
- W. Kent Fuchs (Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering) – Provost of Cornell University
- R. Edwin Garcia (Professor of Materials Engineering) - researcher and author[1]
- Leslie Geddes (Showalter Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Biomedical Engineering) – National Medal of Technology recipient
- Frank Bunker Gilbreth, Sr. (lecturer) – industrial engineer
- Lillian Gilbreth (Professor of Industrial Engineering) – efficiency expert, first female member of U.S. National Academy of Engineering
- F.W. Hutchinson – engineer and researcher of heating, ventilation, and air conditioning
- Kathleen Howell - astrodynamist known for deep space spacecraft mission design using halo orbits
- Frank P. Incropera (Professor of Mechanical Engineering) – ISI highly cited researcher on heat transfer
- Leah Jamieson (Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Dean of Engineering) – a winner of Gordon Prize
- Avinash Kak (Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering) – researcher of information processing
- Rangasami L. Kashyap (Professor of Electrical Engineering) – applied mathematician
- Linda Katehi (Professor of Electrical Engineering and Dean of Engineering) – Chancellor of University of California, Davis
- Daniel B. Luten (Instructor in architectural and sanitary engineering) – bridge builder who patented the Luten arch
- Robert E. Machol (Professor of Electrical Engineering) – early writer on systems engineering
- Shimon Y. Nof (Professor of Industrial Engineering)
- Nicholas A. Peppas (Professor of Chemical Engineering) – biochemist and engineer best known for his research in hydrogels for drug delivery
- R. Byron Pipes (Professor of Engineering) – former President of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
- A. Alan Pritsker (Professor of Industrial Engineering) – pioneer in simulation modeling, creator of GERT and SLAM programs
- Vladimir Shalaev (Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and of Biomedical Engineering) – researcher of metamaterials, transformation optics, nanophotonics and plasmonics
- R. Norris Shreve (Professor of Chemical Engineering)
- Shu Shien-Siu (Professor of Engineering Science)
- Mete Sozen (Professor of Structural Engineering)
- Rusi Taleyarkhan (Professor of Nuclear Engineering)
- Yeram S. Touloukian (Professor of Mechanical Engineering) – founder of the Thermophysical Properties Research Center
- Raymond Viskanta – ISI Highly Cited researcher in the field of heat transfer
- Steve Wereley (Professor of Mechanical Engineering) – co-inventor of micro-particle image velocimetry
- Jerry Woodall (Professor of Electrical Engineering) – inventor of first commercially viable red LEDs, a winner of National Medal of Technology
- Henry T. Yang (Professor of Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering and Dean of Engineering) – Chancellor of the University of California, Santa Barbara
- John W. Sutherland (Professor and Fehsenfeld Family Head of Environmental and Ecological Engineering (EEE))
Humanities and social sciences
- Dorsey Armstrong – editor-in-chief of Arthuriana
- Louis René Beres – Professor of Political Science
- James A. Berlin – theorist in the field of composition studies and the history of rhetoric and composition theory
- Marianne Boruch – poet and essayist
- Robert X. Browning – Professor of Political Science
- Ronald Verlin Cassill – novelist, short story writer, reviewer, editor, painter, and lithographer
- Philip B. Coulter – political scientist
- Paul Draper – philosopher of religion, editor of the journal Philo
- William H. Gass – novelist and short story writer
- Roxane Gay – writer and editor
- Mark Harris – novelist and biographer
- Djelal Kadir – literature academic
- Brigit Pegeen Kelly – poet
- Emma Montgomery McRae – Professor of Literature, Dean of Women
- Robert Melson – political scientist specializing in ethnic conflict and genocide
- Cheryl Mendelson – professor of philosophy, novelist, non-fiction writer
- Alan H. Monroe – creator of Monroe's motivated sequence
- Annie Smith Peck – professor of archaeology and Latin, mountaineer
- Victor Raskin – Professor of Linguistics, founding editor of
- W. Charles Redding – professor of communication, "father" of organizational communication
- Gunther E. Rothenberg – military historian
- Kermit Scott – professor of philosophy, advocate for the poor, previously thought to be the namesake of Kermit the Frog
- Michael Stohl – political scientist
Management and economics
Pharmacy, health and human sciences
Science and mathematics
- Shreeram Shankar Abhyankar – Professor of Mathematics, known for his contributions to singularity theory
- Ross H. Arnett, Jr. – entomologist and beetle researcher
- Struther Arnott – molecular biologist and cancer researcher
- Mikhail Atallah – computer scientist, researcher on algorithms and computer security
- Louis Auslander – mathematician
- David Avison – physicist and photographer
- John D. Axtell – chemist, agronomist, a discoverer of high-lysine sorghum
- Harry Beevers – plant physiologist
- Jeffrey Bennetzen – Professor of Genetics
- Elisa Bertino – computer scientist, director of CERIAS
- Dale L. Boger – medicinal and organic chemist
- Carl R. de Boor – assistant professor at Purdue University, won the John von Neumann Prize from the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics in 1996
- Louis de Branges de Bourcia – Professor of Mathematics, proved the Bieberbach conjecture
- Herbert C. Brown – Nobel Laureate in Chemistry in 1979
- Alok R. Chaturvedi – professor in the Department of Computer Sciences; the Director of Purdue Homeland Security Institute; technical lead for the Sentient World Simulation project
- Douglas Comer – computer scientist, Internet pioneer
- R. Graham Cooks – chemist, mass spectrometrist
- Ronald DeVore – mathematician known for approximation theory, wavelet theory, compressive sensing
- Richard Duffin – physicist
- Ahmed K. Elmagarmid – computer scientist, Executive Director of the Qatar Computing Research Institute
- Paul Erdős – Professor of Mathematics, winner of the Wolf Prize in Mathematics in 1983/4
- Ephraim Fischbach – physicist known for research on the fifth force
- Harley Flanders – mathematician and textbook author
- Joseph Francisco – atmospheric chemist, President of the American Chemical Society
- Walter Gautschi – mathematician, contributor to numerical analysis
- Jayanta Kumar Ghosh – statistician
- Melvin Hochster – commutative algebraist
- Otto F. Hunziker – early head of Dairy department, supervised construction of Smith Hall
- Meyer Jerison – mathematician known for his work in functional analysis and rings
- Minhyong Kim – mathematician
- Robert R. Korfhage – computer scientist who contributed to information retrieval
- Karl Lark-Horovitz – pioneer in solid state physics, contributed to the invention of the first transistor
- Chris J. Leaver – botanist, now at the University of Oxford
- László Lempert, professor of mathematics, winner of Stefan Bergman Prize, 2001
- Jingjing Liang, associate professor of forest ecology
- Bernard J. Liska – food scientist
- Sergey Macheret – physicist and aerospace engineer
- Fred McLafferty – chemist who described the McLafferty rearrangement in mass spectrometry
- Edwin T. Mertz – chemist and biochemist who co-discovered high-lysine corn
- Dan Milisavljevic - astronomer and physicist
- David S. Moore – statistician
- John Ulric Nef – chemist who discovered the Nef reaction
- Ei-ichi Negishi – Professor of Chemistry, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry in 2010
- Albert Overhauser – Professor of Physics, discovered the Overhauser Effect
- Alan Perlis – Professor of Mathematics, the first person to win the Turing Award in 1966
- Justin Jesse Price – mathematician
- John R. Rice – Professor of Computer Science, founding editor of ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software
- Arthur Rosenthal – mathematician, proved the Hartogs–Rosenthal theorem
- Michael G. Rossmann – Professor of Biological Sciences, Member of National Academy of Sciences, mapped human common cold virus, pointed out the Rossmann fold
- Robert G. Sachs – theoretical physicist, director of Argonne National Laboratory
- David Sanders – Professor of Biological Sciences
- Otto Schilling – algebraist
- Julian Schwinger – Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1965
- Freydoon Shahidi – mathematician, a namesake of the Langlands–Shahidi method
- Shen Chun-shan – physicist, president of National Tsing Hua University
- Yum-Tong Siu – professor of mathematics
- Jeffrey H. Smith – algebraic topologist
- Eugene Spafford – Professor of Computer Science and Director of CERIAS, computer security expert
- Lonnie Lee VanZandt – Professor of Physics, formed the molecular biological physics group at Purdue
- Jeffrey Vitter (Professor of Computer Science and Dean of Science, 2002–2008) – computer scientist known for his work on external memory algorithms, provost of University of Kansas
- Clarence Abiathar Waldo – Professor of Mathematics, noted for his role in defeating the Indiana Pi Bill of 1897
- George W. Whitehead – algebraic topologist who defined the J-homomorphism
- Harvey Washington Wiley – Professor of Chemistry, first FDA commissioner and advocate for the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906
- Arthur Winfree – theoretical biologist, MacArthur Fellow, winner of the Norbert Wiener Prize in Applied Mathematics
- Myron E. Witham – Professor of Mathematics, college football coach
- Arif Zaman – Professor of Statistics, researcher of pseudo-random number generation and computer science
- Jian-Kang Zhu - Distinguished Professor of Plant Biology
Other
- Richard Blanton – anthropologist and archaeologist
- David A. Caputo – former Dean of the School of Liberal Arts, later president of Pace University
- Amelia Earhart – women's career counselor, aviator
- Joel Fink – Purdue University Theatre, currently Associate Dean of Roosevelt University
- Benjamin Harrison – trustee, President of the United States
- Ruth Lawanson – volleyball assistant coach, Olympic bronze medal in volleyball (1992).
- Charles Major – trustee, novelist[2]
- Gary Lee Nelson – composer
- Jay Nunamaker – researcher of information systems
- Lynn Okagaki – Commissioner of the National Center for Education Research
- John Purdue – founder and namesake
- Timothy Sands – provost, former acting president, materials engineer, President of Virginia Tech
- Mark Smith – Dean of Graduate School, 1984 Olympic fencer.[3]
- Dorothy C. Stratton – first full-time dean of women (1933–1942), Director of the SPARS during World War II
- Lee Watson – Broadway and television lighting designer
- Randy Woodson – former provost, now chancellor of North Carolina State University
- Al G. Wright – former Director of Bands, now Chairman of the Board of the John Philip Sousa Foundation
- Rolv Yttrehus – contemporary classical music composer
Notes and References
- Web site: R. Edwin García . IEEE Xplore . IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers . 7 June 2023.
- Web site: The Charles Major Papers. September 15, 2014.
- News: Lauren. Westberg. Olympic fencer teaches students, reflects on games. July 28, 2012. Purdue Exponent. July 28, 2012.