Stern Receives SNAME’s Taylor Medal

Fred Stern poses at the wave basin.

Originally Posted on December 5th, 2018

An interviewer and videographer conduct an interview with Fred Stern at the IIHR wave basin.

IIHR’s Fred Stern being interviewed at the wave basin where he conducts much of his research.

IIHR’s Fred Stern has been selected to receive the 2018 David W. Taylor Medal for Notable Achievement in Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering. The award was presented at the recent annual meeting of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers (SNAME) in Providence, R.I. This honor is presented to an individual who has made significant contributions to the field of ship hydrodynamics and naval architecture. Stern holds the George D. Ashton Professor of Hydroscience and Engineering at the University of Iowa (UI), where he also a professor of mechanical engineering with more than 35 years of experience teaching fluid mechanics and conducting sophisticated research in ship hydrodynamics. He is also a research engineer at IIHR—Hydroscience & Engineering, an engineering research institute at the UI.

“This award is particularly meaningful to me because so many of my esteemed colleagues have received in the past,” Stern says. “I am truly humbled to be in such distinguished company.”

Stern’s expertise in experimental and computational ship hydrodynamics is world-renowned, particularly his integrated approach to research in which simulations provide guidance, experiments provide validation data, and simulations fill in sparse data. IIHR’s research facilities (state-of-the-art towing tank and wave basin) provide data for physics and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) validation, including test cases for CFD workshops and NATO Applied Vehicle Technology (AVT) working groups.

CFDShip-Iowa URANS/DES (developed by Stern and his team) has been known as one of the world’s best CFD codes for ship hydrodynamics since 1994. It has many functionalities, including next-generation high-fidelity/resolution V6, which enables two-phase sharp-interface; as well as direct numerical simulation (DNS) and large-eddy simulation (LES) using billions of grid points. Stern’s research also includes the development of verification and validation (V&V) and uncertainty quantification (UQ) methods, fundamental physics and ship performance, deterministic/stochastic shape/multi-disciplinary optimization, and fluid structure interaction, as described in his hundreds of peer-reviewed publications.

A model scale ship at the IIHR wave basin.

IIHR’s new state-of-the-art Wave Basin Facility, completed in 2010, is a clear-span facility for ship hydrodynamics research and related education.

Stern served as chair/member of the International Towing Tank Conference (ITTC) and its CFD workshop committees, as well as the NATO AVT working group. He has participated in many national/international collaborations; and is ASME fellow and a member of SNAME and the American Society for Engineering Education. Stern has received many honors, including the following: UI Faculty Scholar (1993–96); Faculty Research Excellence (2012); Weinblum Lecturer (2012–13); and NATO STO AVT panel excellence awards (2016). Stern gratefully acknowledges the support of the Office of Naval Research for his research.