Tieyuan Zhu is an associate professor of geophysics at Penn State who leads an environmental geophysics group applying seismic and electromagnetic methods to energy and environmental challenges such as CO2 sequestration, permafrost change, and fracture/fluid dynamics in the critical zone. With a PhD from Stanford and over a decade of academic research experience, he develops real-time seismic imaging techniques for monitoring stored CO2 and repurposes fiber-optic cables as dense sensors to capture earth and environmental dynamics across space and time. His work uniquely combines high-resolution imaging, attenuation-based monitoring, and distributed fiber sensing to detect mechanical and chemical changes in subsurface systems. He has translated postdoctoral research on real-time CO2 seismic attenuation at UT Austin into an active research program addressing practical geohazard and climate-adaptation problems.
11 years of coding experience
6 years of employment as a software developer
Ms, Seismology, Ms, Seismology at Chinese Academy of Sciences
Bachelor of Science (BS) with honors, Geophysics and Seismology, Bachelor of Science (BS) with honors, Geophysics and Seismology at China University of Geosciences (Beijing)
Ph.D, Geophysics and Seismology, Ph.D, Geophysics and Seismology at Stanford University
Contributions:1 PR, 5 pushes, 2 branches in 26 days
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