Subject: Rice data, GEM-related pre-proposal Resent-Date: Wed, 22 Dec 1999 09:06:20 -0500 Resent-From: Geoffrey Fox Resent-To: p_gcf@npac.syr.edu Date: Tue, 21 Dec 1999 17:04:28 +0100 From: "James R. Rice" Organization: Harvard University (and for 1999, Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris) To: gcf@npac.syr.edu CC: terry_tullis@brown.edu Dear Geoffrey, I am appending my curriculum vitae (and related info on current support and recent students, if needed) for the GEM-related pre-proposal to NSF. Terry Tullis requested that I send it, and I think he intends that I would be listed with the senior scientists. Thanks for taking the lead on this. Best wishes, Jim Rice -- James R. Rice Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences and Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Harvard University, 224 Pierce Hall 29 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA tel 1-617-495-3445, secretary 496-1467 fax 495-9837, http://esag.harvard.edu/rice Temporary address, 15 Jan 99 to 14 Jan 2000: Departement Terre Atmosphere Ocean Ecole Normale Superieure 24 rue Lhomond, bureau 319 75231 Paris cedex 05, France tel (from USA) 011 33 1 44 32 22 99 secretary 44 32 22 11, fax 44 32 22 00 *************************************************************** James R. Rice, curriculum vitae Born: 3 December 1940, Frederick, MD Employment: 9/81-present, Gordon McKay Professor of Engineering Sciences and Geophysics, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University. 1/99-1/00: on leave as Blaise Pascal International Research Professor, Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris. 2/95-12/95: on leave as Allan Cox Visiting Professor, Dept. of Geophysics, Stanford. 9/88 - 8/89: on leave as Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Scholar, Div. of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Caltech. 9/64-8/81: Postdoc 9/64-6/65, Assistant Professor 7/65-6/68, Associate Professor 7/68-6/70, Professor 7/70-8/81, and L. Herbert Ballou Professor of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics 7/73-8/81, Division of Engineering, Brown University. 9/71-8/72: on leave as NSF Senior Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Cambridge, and Overseas Fellow, Churchill College. Address: 224 Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138. Education: Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA: B.S., Engineering Mechanics, 6/62; M.S., Applied Mechanics, 6/63; Ph.D., Applied Mechanics, 10/64. Professional activities/awards (current or recent): Member and fellow, AGU, ASME. Member, APS, ASCE. Committee on Seismology, NRC Com. on Phys. Sci., Math. and Resources, 1992-8. Committee on Science of Earthquakes, NRC Com. on Phys. Sci., Math. and Resources, 1996-9. Francis Birch Lecturer, AGU, 1993. Timoshenko Medal, ASME, 1994. National Academy of Engineering, 1980-. National Academy of Sciences, 1981-. Foreign Member of the Royal Society (London), 1996-. Honorary Doctor of Science: Lehigh, 1985; Northwestern, 1996; Brown, 1997; Paris VI, 1999. Five most relevant publications: Geubelle, P. H., and J. R. Rice, "A Spectral Method for Three-Dimensional Elastodynamic Fracture Problems", J. Mech. Phys. Solids, 43, 1995, pp. 1791-1824. Rice, J. R., and Y. Ben-Zion, "Slip complexity in earthquake fault models", Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA, 93, 1996, pp. 3811-3818. Ben-Zion, Y., and J. R. Rice, "Dynamic simulations of slip on a smooth fault in an elastic solid"; J. Geophys. Res., 102, 1997, pp. 17771-17784. Taylor, M. A. J., R. Dmowska and J. R. Rice, "Upper-plate Stressing and Seismicity in the Subduction Earthquake Cycle", Journal of Geophysical Research, 103, 1998, pp. 24523-24542. Zheng, G., and J. R. Rice, "Conditions under which velocity-weakening friction allows a self-healing versus a crack-like mode of rupture", Bull. Seismol. Soc. Amer., 88, 1998, pp. 1466-1483. Associates, last 4 years: Collaborators: M. Cocco, R. Dmowska, R. Madariaga, P. Segall, W. D. Stuart, J. R. Willis, Y. Ben-Zion, E. Bouchaud, J.-P. Bouchaud, G. Perrin, P. Geubelle, A. Cochard, J. Schmittbuhl, T. Tada, J.-S. Wang, G. E. Beltz, N. Lapusta, J. Kysar, Y. Sun, S. Mesarovic, M. A. J. Taylor and G. Zheng. Thesis advisor F. P. Beer, postdoctoral advisor D. C. Drucker. *************************************************************** *************************************************************** Current and pending support (J. R. Rice, as of December 1999) (1) USGS FY 99 grant 99-HQ-GR-0025: "Fault rheology and earthquake dynamics", PI: J. R. Rice, $130,000 for two-year period, 1 March 1999 to 30 January 2001 ($65,000 for first year, 1 March 1999 to 29 February 2000; $65,000 for second year, 1 March 2000 to 28 February 2001). (2) Southern California Earthquake Center, University of Southern California subcontract PO #621911, two grants: (i) "New methodology in computational seismology for dynamic rupture along complex fault systems", PI: J. R. Rice, $30,000 for 1 February 1999 to 31 January 2000. (ii) "Elastodynamic simulations of rupture propagation and earthquake sequences along complex fault systems", PI: J. R. Rice, $34,000 for 1 February 1999 to 31 January 2000. ($64,000 total, in two grants, for 1 February 1999 to 31 January 2000). (3) NSF Division of Earth Sciences, grant EAR-9805182: "Global studies of seismicity and deformation at convergent margins due to heterogeneous coupling", PI: J. R. Rice, Co-I: R. Dmowska; $135,000 for two-year period, 15 July 1998 to 30 June 2000 ($42,894 for first year, 15 July 1998 to 30 June 1999, and $92,106 for second year, 1 July 1999 to 30 June 2000.) (4) Office of Naval Research/Ship Structures Division, Solid Mechanics Program, grant N00014-96-10777, "Studies in fracture dynamics", PI: J. R. Rice; $ 240,000 for 15 January 1999 to 14 January 2002, with formal grant end on 31 Jan 2002; $ 80,000 for Year 4, 15 January 1999 to 14 January 2000; $ 80,000 for Year 5, 15 January 2000 to 14 January 2001; $ 80,000 for Year 6, 15 Jan 2001 to 14 January 2002. (This is a continuation of a grant initiated under the title "Cracking through heterogeneous solids: statistical elastodynamic and plastic effects", funded at $ 522,000 total for 15 February 1996 to 14 January 1999; $187,500 for Year 1, 15 February 1996 to 14 January 1997; $ 167,250 for Year 2, 15 January 1997 to 14 January 1998; $167,250 for Year 3, 15 January 1998 to 14 January 1999. Total award is $ 522,000 + $ 240,000 = $ 762,000 for 15 February 1996 to 31 January 2002.) (5) Materials Research Science and Engineering Center, Harvard University (funded by National Science Foundation), two grants: (i) "Aspects of dynamic fracture", PI's: D. S. Fisher and J. R. Rice; $45,000 for 1 March 1999 to 29 February, 2000. (ii) "Multiscale modeling of materials", PI's: E. Kaxiras and J. R. Rice; $45,000 for 1 March 1999 to 29 February, 2000. *************************************************************** *************************************************************** Students graduating within last three years (J. R. Rice): Gutuan Zheng, Ph.D. 1997, male, oriental, China, 6 years to complete. Mark A. J. Taylor, Ph.D. 1998, male, caucasian, England, 5 years to complete. John W. Morrissey, Ph.D. 1998, male, caucasian, USA, 6 years to complete. Jeffrey W. Kysar, Ph.D. 1998, male, caucasian, USA, 6 years to complete. ***************************************************************