Sauro Succi is an Italian scientist, internationally credited for being one of the founders of the successful Lattice Boltzmann method for fluid dynamics and soft matter.[1][2]

From 1995 to 2018, Succi has been research director at the Istituto Applicazioni Calcolo of the National Research Council (CNR) in Rome.[3] Since 2018, he has been appointed principal investigator of the research line Mesoscale Simulations at the Italian Institute of Technology (IIT).[4]

He is also a research affiliate to the Physics Department at Harvard University (since 2000), Fellow of the Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies (FRIAS) and senior fellow of the Erwin Schrödinger International Institute for Mathematical Physics.

He is an alumnus of the University of Bologna, from which he earned a degree in nuclear engineering, and the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, from which he obtained a PhD in plasma physics .

He has published extensively in plasma physics, fluid dynamics, kinetic theory, quantum fluids and soft, flowing matter.

He has also authored the well-known monographs "The lattice Boltzmann Equation for fluid dynamics and beyond", (2001, Clarendon Press.) [1] and "The Lattice Boltzmann Equation for complex States of Flowing Matter", (2018, Oxford Univ. Press.) [2] "Sailing the Ocean of Complexity: lessons from the physics-biology frontier", (2022, Oxford Univ. Press.) [3].


Dr Succi has been holding visiting/teaching appointments at many academic Institutions, such as the University of Harvard, Paris VI, University of Chicago, Yale, Tufts, Queen Mary London, Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa and the Swiss Polytechnic of Zürich (ETHZ).

From 2014 to 2019 he has been a Visiting Faculty at the IACS (Institute of Applied Computational Science of Harvard University), where he taught Computational Methods for the Physical Sciences (AM227).

Dr Succi is an elected Fellow of the American Physical Society (1998). He has received the Humboldt Prize in physics (2002), the Killam Award bestowed by the University of Calgary (2005) and the Raman Chair of the Indian Academy of Sciences (2011) and the Sigillum Magnum of the University of Bologna (2018). He also served as an external senior fellow at the Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies (2009–2013), senior fellow of the Erwin Schrödinger International Institute for Mathematical Physics in Vienna (2013) and Weston Chair at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot (2016) and External Faculty Member of the Institute for Advanced Studies of Amsterdam (2017), Visiting Scientist at the IHES Paris (2024). In 2022 he has been appointed Honorary Professor at University College London.

Dr Succi is an elected member of the Academia Europaea (2015), and he features in the list of Top Italian Scientists ([4])

He has been awarded the 2017 APS Aneesur Rahman Prize for Computational Physics.

In 2017 he has been awarded the ERC Advanced Grant "Computational design of porous mesoscale materials (COPMAT)".

He has been awarded the 2019 Berni J. Alder CECAM Prize for "having transformed the Lattice-Boltzmann method into an overarching framework for kinetic physical phenomena. In addition, he has been pivotal in building and constantly inspiring a community now counting tens of thousands of researchers in academia and industry, all across chemistry and physics, and reaching into more distant fields such as engineering or biology".

He is the co-recipient of the Premio Aspen Institute Italia 2024 for excellent collaboration ITA_USA:https://www.aspeninstitute.it/premio-aspen-2024-la-ricerca-vincitric and the recipient of the 2023 Eugenio Beltrami Senior Scientist Prize for the Mathematics and mechanics of Complex Systems, http://memocscenter.univaq.it/memocs/en/attivita/the-eugenio-beltrami-senior-scientist-prize/

References

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  1. ^ Succi, Sauro (2001). The Lattice Boltzmann Equation - for fluid dynamics and beyond. Clarendon Press.
  2. ^ Succi, Sauro (2018). The Lattice Boltzmann Equation - for complex states of flowing matter. Oxford University Press.
  3. ^ "Sauro Succi's CNR Home Page".
  4. ^ "IIT People - Sauro Succi".
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