Raj Prabhu

Raj Prabhu

Raj Prabhu, pictured sitting on a conference room table.
Photo by Russ Houston

One of Raj Prabhu’s earliest childhood memories is of watching a millipede move across the ground during preschool. He studied how each set of its legs moved precisely in sync. He commented to his teacher about the continuous wavelike motion that millipedes made while walking, instead of each leg being independent of each other. His teacher praised him for being so observant, and from then on, he told people he wanted to become a scientist.

Prabhu’s family is well-educated, and in the 1960s, his mother was one of the first women in southern India to receive an undergraduate degree in an engineering field. Most of his close family members have some form of bachelor’s or master’s degree, but Prabhu was the first to attain a Ph.D.

When Prabhu decided to leave India in 2002, he was offered graduate student positions from places like Akron University and Michigan State, but he said he ultimately decided on Mississippi State because of the research opportunities.

He went on to get his master’s and then a doctoral degree in mechanical engineering.

“What kept me here were the opportunities that were available through research projects, student mentoring and the team of researchers that I have had the privilege of working with,” Prabhu said.

Now Prabhu works full time for ݮƵas an assistant professor in the Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, as well as for the university’s Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems. His main passion lies in “finding exciting solutions for human health-related problems.”

When asked about what excites him most about his work, he said it’s definitely his current research. He is part of a team focusing on effects and prevention of traumatic brain injuries. Prabhu leads the university’s research on the finite element analysis of diverse injury scenarios to the human head, such as a car crash, blast or blunt impact. He also is currently involved in developing physics-based constitutive description for biomaterials, as well as being part of collaborative research in the areas of computational biomechanics, infant head trauma and secondary injuries arising from traumatic events.

“I love being here at ݮƵand the important work being carried out at ABE and CAVS,” Prabhu said.