Tuan N. Pham

Fixed-term Assistant Professor


I moved to Brigham Young University in 2020, Eastern Oregon University in 2022, and Brigham Young University-Hawaii in 2023. My new website is here.
Office: Kidder Hall 268
Phone: 541-713-6196
E-mail: phamt3@oregonstate.edu

Postal address:
Department of Mathematics
College of Science
Oregon State University
Kidder Hall 368, 2000 SW Campus Way,
Corvallis, Oregon 97331-4605 USA

Education:

Ph.D. in Mathematics, University of Minnesota–Twin Cities, 2018
M.S. in Applied Mathematics, University of Orleans, France, 2012
B.S. in Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Science, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, 2010

Courses:

Research projects:

My research interest is in Partial Differential Equations, Numerical Analysis, Probability theory, and their applications in Fluid Mechanics and Mathematical Biology. I am also interested in the relation between stochastic processes and the analysis of PDE. My recent research has been on the regularity theory of the Navier-Stokes Equations and several modeling equations. A brief desciption of my recent projects is here.
Publications:
  • R. Dascaliuc and T. Pham, "Minimal blowup data for the cheap Navier-Stokes equation" 2019. In preparation.
  • C. Orum and T. Pham, "Stochastic non-explosion of the Bessel cascade of the 3D Navier-Stokes equations" 2019. In preparation.
  • Radu Dascaliuc, Tuan Pham, Enrique Thomann, and Edward C. Waymire. "Stochastic explosion in the self-similar Le Jan-Sznitman cascade associated to the 3D Navier-Stokes equations". Preprint (2019).
  • T. Pham and V. Sverak, "Minimal blow-up data for potential Navier-Stokes singularities in the half space." Preprint (2019).
  • T. Pham and E. Thomann, "On smallness condition of initial data for Le Jan-Sznitman cascade of the Navier-Stokes equations." Arxiv e-print (Oct 2019).
  • T. Pham, "A global regularity criterion for the Navier-Stokes equations based on approximate solutions." Arxiv e-print (Oct 2019).
  • T. Pham, "Topics on the regularity theory of the Navier-Stokes equations" PhD thesis 2018.

Notes:

  • Seminar lecture notes are here.
  • My old website at the University of Minnesota is here.



This page was last updated on Saturday, March 28, 2020.