Wind Institute OSW Fellowship at Rutgers Faculty Advisors
Aziz Ezzat Ahmed
Cohorts 2022-2023, 2023-2024, 2024-2025
Dr. Ezzat leads the Renewables and Industrial Analytics (RIA) research group at Rutgers University. He received his Ph.D. from Texas A&M University in 2019, and his B.Sc. degree from Alexandria, Egypt, in 2013, both in Industrial Engineering. His research interests are in the areas of spatiotemporal data and decision sciences, probabilistic forecasting...
Moulik Kallupalam Balasubramanian
Cohort 2023-2024
Dr. Balasubramanian is an Assistant Teaching Professor in the Mathematics department at Rutgers University, New Brunswick. He teaches various undergraduate mathematics classes and reflects on teaching methods and how to make learning more active. His research interests are in mathematical physics and, recently on applying mathematics through optimization, statistics, and machine learning.
Onur Bilgen
Cohorts 2022-2023, 2023-2024, 2024-2025
Dr. Bilgen is a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), and various other engineering societies. His research involves the development of new control, energy harvesting, and propulsion mechanisms for wind/water turbines, aircraft (e.g., drones), soft/compliant robotics with smart materials...
Laurent Burlion
Cohorts 2022-2023, 2023-2024
Dr. Burlion began his career in his native France as an expert engineer for the French DoD before serving as a research scientist for French Aerospace Lab Onera, where he developed a passion for flight systems. He is working with MAE colleague Onur Bilgen on a project funded by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency to advance floating offshore wind turbines as a clean energy solution for New Jersey.
Stephen Danley
Cohort 2022-2023
Dr. Danley is an Associate Professor of Public Policy and Administration and author of A Neighborhood Politics of Last Resort: Post-Katrina New Orleans and the Right to the City. He researches protests, such as in his piece “They’re Not Building It for Us” which examines protests of gentrification in Camden, NJ. He also researches participation, including a grant with the RWJ Foundation to study youth participation in their Next Generation Community Leaders initiative.
Sean Duffy
Cohort 2024-2025
Dr. Duffy received his PhD from the University of Chicago in Developmental Psychology. Since joining the Rutgers faculty at Rutgers University–Camden, he has conducted research on a variety of topics such as spatial reasoning and representation in infants and young children, statistical models of memory and judgment, environmental attitudes, values, and opinions, and most recently about opinions and attitudes about Offshore Wind energy in New Jersey.
Steve Gold
Cohorts 2023-2024, 2024-2025
Professor Gold teaches Environmental Law, Administrative Law (the law of government agencies), and other courses at Rutgers Law School in Newark. He received an A.B. in biology from Harvard University and a J.D. from Yale Law School. Before Joining the Rutgers faculty, Professor Gold spent nearly two decades enforcing federal pollution laws as an attorney and senior attorney with the Environmental Enforcement Section of the United States Department of Justice.
Josh T. Kohut
Cohort 2022-2023
Dr. Kohut earned a B.S. in physics from the College of Charleston and a Ph.D. in physical oceanography from Rutgers University. He is a professor in the Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences and a member of the Center for Ocean Observing Leadership. His research focuses on the ocean processes that structure marine ecosystems and also deals with storm intensity, offshore wind, local water quality monitoring; U.S. east coast regional fisheries; and polar ecosystems in Antarctic coastal waters.
Robert Mieth
Cohort 2024-2025
Dr. Mieth is an Assistant Professor in the Industrial and Systems Engineering Department at Rutgers University. He is the founder and PI of the Reliability, Operation, and Planning of Power and Energy Systems(ROPES) Lab. Before joining Rutgers in fall 2023, Dr. Mieth was a Leopoldina Postdoctoral Fellow in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Princeton University....
Travis Miles
Cohorts 2022-2023, 2023-2024, 2024-2025
Dr. Miles is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, where he also received his Doctorate. At RUCOOL, he has pioneered the use of autonomous underwater vehicles and ocean observing networks to study the oceans' response to hurricanes and is currently pursuing new research on ocean and atmosphere interactions with the development of offshore wind farms in the Mid-Atlantic region.
Daphne Munroe
Cohorts 2022-2023, 2024-2025
Dr. Munroe is a shellfish ecologist at the Haskin Shellfish Research Laboratory. She earned a BSc in Environmental Science at Simon Fraser University and a PhD in Animal Science at the University of British Columbia. As a JSPS Post-Doctoral Fellow, she spent nearly two years in Japan studying intertidal community ecology at Hokkaido University. Her research focuses on the sustainable management of coastal and marine resources like shellfish fisheries and aquaculture.
Mariya Naumova
Cohorts 2023-2024, 2024-2025
Dr. Naumova holds a Ph.D. in Operation Research from Rutgers University, and her B.S. and M.S. degrees are in Mathematics from Perm State University, Russia. Professor Naumova is currently with the Finance department at Rutgers Business School where she teaches classes in Quantitative Finance and does research in game theory and optimization under uncertainty.
Mark Paul
Cohort 2023-2024
Dr. Paul is an Assistant Professor of Economics, a member of the Rutgers Climate Institute, and a member of the Executive Board at Environmental Research: Energy. He is also the author of The End of Freedom: Reclaiming America's Lost Promise of Economic Rights, published with University of Chicago Press. His research examines the distributional implications of deep decarbonization in the United States, focusing on economic pathways to reduce inequality and mitigate emissions.
Benedetto Piccoli
Cohort 2023-2024, 2024-2025
Dr. Piccoli is University Professor and the Joseph and Loretta Lopez Chair Professor of Mathematics at Rutgers University–Camden. He also served as the Vice Chancellor for Research. His research interests span various areas of applied mathematics, including control theory, traffic flow on networks, crowd dynamics, math finance and application to autonomous driving, population health and bio-medical systems.
Victorial Ramenzoni
Cohorts 2022-2023, 2024-2025
Dr. Ramenzoni is an environmental anthropologist who studies coastal community adaptation. She was born in Argentina, where she completed her B.A. in Sociocultural Anthropology at Universidad de Buenos Aires. She moved to the U.S. in 2007 to pursue her Ph.D. at the University of Georgia. As part of her doctoral research, she lived on Flores in Eastern Indonesia for about two years, exploring environmental uncertainty among artisanal fishing communities.
Grace Saba
Cohort 2023-2024
Dr. Saba is an Associate Professor who leads a research group focused on biological oceanography and marine ecology within the Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences and serves as a faculty in the Center for Ocean Observing Leadership. In the offshore wind space, she is collecting observational data on ecological and physical oceanographic conditions such as pelagic zooplankton, as well as marine mammal presence in current and planned wind lease areas using autonomous underwater gliders.
Kevin St. Martin
Cohort 2024-2025
Dr. St. Martin is a Professor of Geography at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. He is a human geographer whose work is at the intersection of economic geography, political ecology, and critical cartographies. His work includes critical analyses of economic and resource management discourse as well as participatory projects that work to rethink economy and foster economic and environmental wellbeing...
Ruo-Qian Wang
Cohorts 2022-2023, 2023-2024
Dr. Wang is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Rutgers University. He received his Ph.D. in Environmental Fluid Mechanics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and conducted Postdoctoral research at UC Berkeley. Dr. Wang’s research group focuses on developing remote sensing and data-driven/numerical models to address the environmental uncertainty and impacts of hydrokinetic and offshore renewable energy.