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As a graduate student, she was the recipient of a fellowship from the University of Naples, two Amelia Earhart International Awards, the Clare Booth Luce Fellowship, the Luther Long III Award for Excellence in Mechanics.
After working as instructor in Civil and Environmental Engineering at Georgia Tech for one year, she became an assistant professor in mechanical engineering at the University of Utah. In July 2005, she joined the faculty of the University of California, Davis.
She conducts research on applied mechanics of composite structures, and teaches classes in structures and materials. Her main research interests are crashworthiness improvements of composites, structural health monitoring/nondestructive evaluation of composites for detection of damage due to impact, fatigue and chemical degradation.
In 2007 she received a CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation.
Professor Valeria La Saponara
Assistant professor, Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering
(530) 754-8938
vlasaponara@ucdavis.edu
University of California, Davis
2132 Bainer Hall
One Shields Avenue
Davis, CA 95616
Biography
Dr. Valeria La Saponara received her Bachelor's degree in 1994 in aerospace engineering from the University of Naples, Italy. She worked as a research fellow at the MARS Center, Italy, a subcontractor of NASA and the European Space Agency. She then went to the U.S. and completed her Master's and Ph.D. in 2001, both in aerospace engineering, from the Georgia Institute of Technology.As a graduate student, she was the recipient of a fellowship from the University of Naples, two Amelia Earhart International Awards, the Clare Booth Luce Fellowship, the Luther Long III Award for Excellence in Mechanics.
After working as instructor in Civil and Environmental Engineering at Georgia Tech for one year, she became an assistant professor in mechanical engineering at the University of Utah. In July 2005, she joined the faculty of the University of California, Davis.
She conducts research on applied mechanics of composite structures, and teaches classes in structures and materials. Her main research interests are crashworthiness improvements of composites, structural health monitoring/nondestructive evaluation of composites for detection of damage due to impact, fatigue and chemical degradation.
In 2007 she received a CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation.
