Research Description
Ralph E. Showalter joined the Mathematics Department at Oregon
State University in the Fall of 2003. He left the University of Texas
where he held the Blumberg Professorship in Mathematics. Since
receiving the Ph.D. in Mathematics at the University of Illinois
as an NSF Fellow, he has published about 90 research
articles, one research monograph co-authored with R.W. Carroll,
Singular and Degenerate Cauchy Problems , one graduate text,
Hilbert Space Methods in Partial Differential Equations, one
edited volume with J.T. Oden, Workshop on Existence Theory in
Nonlinear Elasticity, and a recent volume in the Mathematical
Surveys and Monographs of the American Mathematical Society,
Monotone Operators in Banach Space and Nonlinear Partial Differential
Equations. He contributed the chapter ``Micro-structure models of
porous Media'' in the book Homogenization and Porous Media.
His research interests include singular or degenerate nonlinear
evolution equations and partial differential equations, related
variational inequalities and free-boundary problems, and applications
to initial-boundary-value problems of mechanics and diffusion. Among
his technical contributions are the development of
existence-uniqueness-regularity theory for pseudo-parabolic and
Sobolev-type partial differential equations, existence theory of
degenerate evolution equations, particularly the doubly-nonlinear
cases. More applied contributions include the formulation and
existence theory for Stefan free-boundary problems for a parabolic
system, for the pseudo-parabolic equation, and for the hyperbolic
telegraphers' equation. He introduced the fissured medium equation
and the layered medium equation as models for diffusion in
heterogeneous medium, and contributed to the development of
distributed systems with microstructure and of hysteresis models. His
current research interests are focused on the development of
mathematical models of flow in deformable porous media. A member of
the American Mathematical Society, the Society for Industrial and
Applied Mathematics, and the Texas Institute for Computational and
Applied Mathematics, he has organized or co-organized a sectional SIAM
meeting, an AMS special session, and an NSF Workshop on partial
differential equations and applications. He regularly serves as
referee for 20 research journals, and he is a member of the editorial
boards of ten journals; he has supervised 18 Ph.D. dissertations.