Purnima Ratilal

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Purnima Ratilal Makris (born 1971, [1] published as Purnima Ratilal) is an acoustical engineer and oceanographer whose research involves acoustic imaging at the scale of the continental shelf and its applications in tracking marine fish and marine mammal populations. [2] [3] [4] [5] Educated in Singapore and the United States, she works in the United States as a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Northeastern University. [6]

Contents

Education and career

Ratilal received a bachelor's degree in physics from the National University of Singapore in 1994, and worked as a research engineer at DSO National Laboratories in Singapore from 1994 to 1998.

Next, she went to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Department of Ocean Engineering for graduate study in acoustics, [6] with initial support from DSO National Laboratories, [1] and completed her Ph.D. there in 2002. [6] Her dissertation, Remote sensing of submerged objects and geomorphology in continental shelf waters with acoustic waveguide scattering, was supervised by Nicholas C. Makris. [1]

She continued at MIT as a postdoctoral researcher from 2002 to 2004 before taking a faculty position at Northeastern University. [6]

Recognition

Ratilal received the R. Bruce Lindsay Award of the Acoustical Society of America in 2006, "for contributions to the theory of wave propagation and scattering through a waveguide, and to the acoustic remote sensing of marine life". [7] As an assistant professor at Northeastern University, Ratilal received the 2007 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers. [7] [8] She was elected as a Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America in 2014, "for contributions to bioacoustics and underwater acoustic scattering and reverberation". [9]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Ratilal, Purnima (2002), Remote sensing of submerged objects and geomorphology in continental shelf waters with acoustic waveguide scattering (Ph.D. thesis), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, hdl:1721.1/91377
  2. Callaway, Ewen (March 26, 2009), "Fish mega-shoals could be world's biggest animal group", NewScientist, retrieved 2025-11-15
  3. Hartnett, Kevin (March 10, 2016), "Sounds of a feeding frenzy", Boston Globe, retrieved 2025-11-15
  4. Yong, Ed (March 2, 2016), "Where the Whale Things Are: An eavesdropping technique allows scientists to instantly find, map, and classify whales over enormous stretches of ocean", Atlantic, retrieved 2025-11-15
  5. "Using Sound to Understand the Undersea World", The Brief, Northeastern College of Engineering, pp. 6–7, Spring 2023, retrieved 2025-11-15 via Issuu
  6. 1 2 3 4 "Purnima Ratilal Makris", ECE Faculty, Northeastern University Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, retrieved 2025-11-15
  7. 1 2 "National News" (PDF), Acoustics Today, pp. 47–52, September 2009
  8. Leviashvili, Sean (January 11, 2009), "Researcher awarded funding", The Huntington News, retrieved 2025-11-15
  9. Fellows of the Society, Acoustical Society of America, retrieved 2025-11-15