Richard H. Rand
Professor
Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Biography
Rand joined the Cornell faculty in 1967 after receiving his doctorate from Columbia University. He was a visiting professor at the University of California at Berkeley in 1981 and at the University of California at Los Angeles in 1989. Rand received teaching awards from the Engineering College at Cornell in 1986, 1993, 1995, 2005 and 2008, and from the Mathematics Department in 2013. He is a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. He is on the editorial boards of the Journal of Vibration and Control, International Journal of Nonlinear Mechanics, Communications in Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation, and the Journal of Applied Nonlinear Dynamics.
Research Interests
Current research work involves using perturbation methods and bifurcation theory to obtain approximate solutions to differential equations arising from nonlinear dynamics problems in engineering and biology. Current projects include nonlinear vibrations of MEMS (micro-electrical-mechanical systems), evolutionary dynamics, the dynamics of particle accelerators, and differential-delay equations.
Teaching Interests
Nonlinear Dynamics, Perturbation Methods, Applied Differential Equations.
Selected Publications
- Bernstein, A., Richard Herbert Rand. 2016. “Delay-Coupled Mathieu Equations in Synchrotron Dynamics.” Journal of Applied Nonlinear Dynamics 5 (3): 337-348.
- Sah, S. M., Richard Herbert Rand. 2016. “Delay Terms in the Slow Flow.” Journal of Applied Nonlinear Dynamics 5 (4): 471-484.
- Lazarus, L., M. Davidow, Richard Herbert Rand. 2016. “Dynamics of an Oscillator with Delay Parametric Excitation.” International Journal of Non-Linear Mechanics 78: 66-71.
- Wesson, E., Richard Herbert Rand. 2016. “Hopf Bifurcations in Delayed Rock-Paper-Scissors Replicator Dynamics.” Dynamic Games and Applications 6 (1): 139-156.
- Shah, S. Y., M. Zhang, R. Rand, M. Lipson. 2015. “Master-Slave Locking of Optomechanical Oscillators over a Long Distance.” Physical review letters 114: 113602.
Selected Awards and Honors
- Thomas K. Caughey Dynamics Award (ASME Applied Mechanics Divison) 2017
- President’s Award for Outstanding Contributions in Support of Underrepresented Minorities (Cornell University) 2000
- Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow for Excellence in Teaching (Cornell University) 2008
- Zellman Warhaft Commitment to Diversity, Faculty Award (Cornell University) 2011
- ASME Caughey Dynamics Award (American Society of Mechanical Engineers) 2017
- Annual Math Department teaching award for “clear and insightful teaching” (Cornell University) 2013
Education
- B.S. (Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics), Cooper Union, 1964
- M.S. (Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics), Columbia University, 1965
- Eng. Sc.D. (Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics), Columbia University, 1967