• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • About Us
  • ICTT-29
  • Research
  • Courses
  • Get Involved!
  • News
  • Contact Us

Computational Radiation Transport, Multi-Physics, and Predictive Science

Texas A&M University College of Engineering

Mike Hackemack: polygons/polyhedral are fun!

Posted on March 15, 2019 by Jean Ragusa

Mike Hackemack (PhD). Mike worked on Sn transport discretizations for arbitrary polygons/polyhedra. We notably extended Adams’ PWLD method to a quadratic serendipity version. Mike also worked on diffusion synthetic acceleration and mesh adaptivity, in direct continuation of the PhD work of Yaqi and Bruno. Mike’s work led to 1 journal publication.

Mike is now staff member at KAPL (naval propulsion lab).

Filed Under: Arbitrary Polyhedral Mesh, Diffusion Synthetic Acceleration, High-Order Finite Elements, Mesh Adaptivity, Students, Transport

Pages

  • About Us
  • 29th International Conference on Transport Theory (ICTT-29)
  • Research
    • Parallel Deterministic Transport
    • Sponsors
  • Courses
    • NUEN 618
    • NUEN 647
  • Get Involved!
  • News
  • Contact Us

© 2016–2025 Computational Radiation Transport, Multi-Physics, and Predictive Science Log in

Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station Logo
  • College of Engineering
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • State of Texas
  • Open Records
  • Risk, Fraud & Misconduct Hotline
  • Statewide Search
  • Site Links & Policies
  • Accommodations
  • Environmental Health, Safety & Security
  • Employment