Dr. Steffen Marburg

Professor

Build a Statement of Purpose

Generate a tailored SOP for Dr. Steffen Marburg. Improve your application with a focused, well-structured draft.

Biography

Steffen Marburg is a full professor specializing in Vibroacoustics at the Technical University of Munich. His research interests encompass the development and application of numerical methods in vibroacoustics and aeroacoustics, with a strong focus on experimentally based virtual prototyping and complex model combinations for parameter identification. He has worked on structural acoustic optimization, emphasizing its applications in automotive parts, ships, electric tools, and musical instruments. Marburg graduated from the Technical University of Dresden, where he earned his doctoral degree in 1998. Afterward, he remained at TU Dresden until 2004 when he became a junior professor specializing in Structural Acoustic Optimization and Boundary Element Methods. In 2010, he joined the University of the Federal Armed Forces in Munich as a full professor for Technical Dynamics. In 2015, he was appointed to the new professorship in Vibroacoustics at the Technical University of Munich. He serves as Co-Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Theoretical and Computational Acoustics and as an Associate Editor for the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. His recent publications focus on interactive simulations for teaching acoustics, greedy reduced basis schemes for multifrequency solutions, and the development of structural-acoustic optimizations for passive noise control.

Research Interests

Experience

Full Professor

2015-01-01 — Present

Technical University of Munich • Munich, Germany

Leading research and teaching in Vibroacoustics.

Full Professor

2010-01-01 — 2015-01-01

University of the Federal Armed Forces in Munich • Munich, Germany

Conducting research in Technical Dynamics.

Junior Professor

2004-01-01 — 2010-01-01

Technical University of Dresden • Dresden, Germany

Focus on Structural Acoustic Optimization and Boundary Element Methods.

Awards

#

Innovation Award

1999-01-01