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Yu Lin Professor Space Plasma Physics Office: Allison Lab # 203 Address: Phone: (334) 844-4683 |
Education |
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Ph.D., University of Alaska | 1993 |
M.S., Institute of Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China | 1988 |
B.S., Peking University, Beijing, China | 1985 |
Professional Employment |
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Professor, Department of Physics, Auburn University | 2003- present |
Associate Professor, Department of Physics, Auburn University | 1999-2003 |
Associate Professor, Department of Physics, Auburn University | 1994-1999 |
Research Associate, Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska | 1993-1994 |
Research Assistant, Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska | 1993-1998 |
Honors and Awards |
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Alumni Professor, Auburn University | 2013- present |
Changjiang Chair Professor, Ministry of Education of China | 2012- present |
Fellow, American Physical Society (APS) | 2007- present |
Katherine E. Weimer Award (inaugural) for outstanding achievement in plasma science research by a woman physicist in early years of her career, American Physical Society (APS) Division of Plasma Physics (DPP) | 2002 |
Editor’s citation for excellence in refereeing for Geophysical Research Letter | 2001 |
Office of Naval Research (ONR) Young Investigator Award | 1995-1999 |
NSF CAREER Award | 1995-2000 |
NSF CAREER Award | 1993 |
C.T. Elvey Memorial Award for the best student in the College of Natural Science, University of Alaska | 199 |
Research and Teaching Interests |
Scholarly Program - Major Research Contributions: (1) Comprehensive theoretical and simulation studies of the nonlinear structure of reconnection layers in the magnetosphere: From MHD Riemann problem to hybrid simulations, with a paper published in Space Science Reviews in 1993. (2) Generation of pressure pulses and MHD discontinuities by interaction of interplanetary discontinuities (shocks) with the bow shock: Used local and global hybrid simulations to predict and understand the generation of pressure pulses and magnetospheric traveling convection vortices due to variation in the IMF direction. (3) Developed the first (and still only) 3-D global-scale hybrid simulation model of the magnetosphere. (4) Unique large-scale parallel computations of the kinetic physics in magnetospheric plasma processes: Used the 3-D global hybrid simulation to address an array of the dayside processes in the interaction between the solar wind and the magnetosphere, including global ion kinetic physics associated with the magnetic reconnection/FTEs at the magnetopause, foreshock waves and their self-consistent nonlinear interaction with the magnetopause, mode conversion and wave-particle diffusive transport at the magnetopause, and the coupling between the foreshock Fermi-accelerated diffuse ions and the cusp energetic ions. (5) Theoretical/computational studies of the fundamental plasma physics: First fully-kinetic ion particle simulation of mode conversion associated with the kinetic Alfven waves (KAWs): The 3-D hybrid simulation shows for the first time the generation of KAWs dominated by perpendicular and azimuthal wave vectors when the amplitude of KAWs generated by linear mode conversion becomes large enough to drive a nonlinear parametric decay process. The results are fundamentally important to the transport processes at plasma boundary in space and laboratory plasmas. Generation of Alfven and KAWs by ion beam-plasma interaction. (6) Developed an innovative gyrokinetic electron and fully-kinetic ion (GeFi) particle simulation scheme for investigation of plasma processes when wave modes from Alfven to whistler/low-hybrid frequencies need to be handled on an equal footing: Used the GeFi model to investigate the physics of collisionless magnetic reconnection under a finite guide magnetic field with a realistic ion-to-electron mass ratio. Used the GeFi model to investigate the nonlinear low-hybrid physics in space and fusion laboratory plasmas. |
Selected Publications |
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Last updated: 05/07/2015