studying knitted fabrics' special mathematical and mechanical properties
Elisabetta Matsumoto is an American physicist whose scientific interests include the study of knitted fabrics' special mathematical and mechanical properties.[1]
In 2019 Matsumoto was recognized with a National Science Foundation CAREER Award, a distinction the Foundation gives to particularly promising scientists relatively early in their careers.[4]
Combining her interests in mathematics and the mechanical properties of knitting she is one of 24 mathematicians and artists who make up the Mathemalchemy Team.[5]
^
Kat J. McAlpine (2016-01-25). "4D-printed structure changes shape when placed in water". Harvard Gazette. Retrieved 2020-05-06. Reported today in Nature Materials, the 4D printing advance combined materials science and mathematics through the involvement of the study's co-lead authors: A. Sydney Gladman, a graduate research assistant advised by Lewis and specializing in the printing of polymers and composites at the Wyss Institute and SEAS, and Elisabetta Matsumoto, a postdoctoral fellow at the Wyss and SEAS advised by Mahadevan and specializing in condensed matter and material physics.
^"The science of knitting, unpicked". Phys.org. 2019-03-06. Retrieved 2020-05-06. At the American Physical Society March Meeting in Boston this week, Matsumoto will present her work on the mathematical rules that underlie knitting.
^"Eleven Georgia Tech Faculty Members Receive NSF CAREER Awards". Georgia Tech Research Horizons. 2019-08-20. Retrieved 2020-05-06. Eleven Georgia Tech faculty members have been chosen to receive National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER awards in the latest round of funding provided to faculty members in the early stages of their research careers. CAREER awards are considered among the NSF's most prestigious honors.