Robert Behringer

Robert P. Behringer (born October 26, 1948) is an American physicist[1] based at Duke University, whose research first dealt with Critical phenomena and transport properties in fluid helium, such as Rayleigh-Bénard convection, and since 1986 has been involved with granular material, where his most notable achievements have been in the development of the technique of photoelasticity to study spatio-temporal fluctuations. This enabled him to extract vector forces from images of photo-elastic disks, which are models for granular materials. His research demonstrated the strongly fluctuating nature of granular flows. Another aspect of his research has involved the concept of jamming in granular materials.

Behringer was born on October 26, 1948 in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of Frederic and Elisabeth Behringer. He obtained his BSc in Physics at Duke University in 1970, his PhD in Physics in 1975 also at Duke University, with Horst Meyer (physicist) as his mentor, and was a research associate at Bell Labs under the direction of Guenter Ahlers from 1975 -77. A faculty position at Wesleyan University was the next step and in 1980 he was appointed by Duke University, where he became a James B. Duke Professor in 1994.[1]

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