Vrushali A. Bokil profile picture.

Vrushali A. Bokil

Interim Dean of the College of Science
Address

Kidd 048
Corvallis, OR 97331
United States

Degrees
Ph.D. Mathematics, University of Houston, 2003
M.S. Mathematics, New Mexico State University, 1996
Biography

See Vrushali A. Bokil's full profile on the College of Science website.

Professor Bokil received her Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Houston in 2003 under the direction of Professor Roland Glowinski. Before coming to Oregon State University, she was a postdoctoral research associate at the Center for Research in Scientific Computation at North Carolina State University, under the mentorship of Professor H.T. Banks. Dr. Bokil is currently serving on the Faculty Senate Executive committee.

Professor Bokil's general research interests are in applied mathematics, scientific computing, numerical analysis and mathematical biology. Her primary research interests are in the numerical solution of wave propagation problems. Specifically, she has conducted research on the numerical solution of Maxwell's equations using finite difference and finite element methods. Bokil is also working on several problems in mathematical ecology which involve the construction and analyses of deterministic and stochastic models for applications in population dynamics, epidemiology and spatial ecology. Dr. Bokil is currently a co-PI on an NSF funded project OP: Collaborative Research: Compatible Discretizations for Maxwell Models in Nonlinear Optics in collaboration with Drs Yingda Cheng at Michigan State and Fengyan Li at RPI. The objective of the collaborative research program is to make significant advances in the understanding and simulations of Maxwell models in nonlinear optics. In the past, Dr. Bokil was a co-PI on the DOE-NETL funded project Applying Computational Methods to Determine the Electric Current Densities in a Magnetohydrodynamic Generator channel from the External Magnetic Flux Density Measurements,and a co-PI on the NSF-DMS project Residence and First Passage Time Functionals in Heterogeneous Ecological Dispersion. Dr. Bokil was also PI on the NSF-DMS funded project Time Domain Numerical Methods for Electromagnetic Wave Propagation Problems in Complex Dispersive Dielectrics and a Co-PI on the NSF-CMG funded project, Mathematical and Experimental Analysis of Reactive Transport in Discontinuous Porous Media.