Anne Davaille

French geophysicist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anne Davaille is a French geophysicist and director of research at the CNRS, France in the field of Earth Sciences. Her research focuses on Fluid Mechanics and planetary dynamics.

OccupationGeophysicist
Employer(s)Université Paris-Sud (Director of research, FAST laboratory)
KnownforInnovative experiments using thermochemical convection in fluids to simulate the mantles of planet
Quick facts Education, Occupation ...
Anne Davaille
Anne Davaille at ENS in February 2024
EducationESPCI 1988, University of Paris VI, IPGP
OccupationGeophysicist
Employer(s)Université Paris-Sud (Director of research, FAST laboratory)
Known forInnovative experiments using thermochemical convection in fluids to simulate the mantles of planet
Notable workWorked on physics of mantle plumes
Awards2019 Augustus Love medal of the European Geosciences Union
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Education and career

Anne Davaille states that her interest in Earth Science was sparked in her childhood by the project FAMOUS scientific exploration.[1] Davaille graduated from ESPCI in 1988.[2] She defended her PhD thesis, Thermal convection in a variable viscosity fluid. Applications to the Earth in 1991, under the supervision of Claude Jaupart at University Paris VI and IPGP.[3]

Davaille is a director of research at the FAST laboratory (Fluides, Automatique et Systèmes Thermiques) of the Université Paris-Sud.[4][5] Her work focuses on the understanding of fluid mechanics in the mantle of planets, with an emphasis on laboratory experimentation. She has worked extensively on the physics of mantle plumes on Earth [6] as well as on other rocky planets.[7]

Awards and honors

Davaille is the recipient of the 2019 Augustus Love medal of the European Geosciences Union for her innovative experiments and analysis of fluid mechanics to understand convective regimes in the mantle and magmatic systems of the Earth and other planets.[8]

References

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