Call for Abstracts
Abstracts may cover theoretical, experimental, or numerical aspects of cavitation research and must be of archival quality. Emphasis is placed on new developments across all areas of cavitation science and engineering.
Topic Areas:
01 — Cavitation Modelling and Simulation
02 — Nanobubbles and Nucleation
03 — Bubble Dynamics
04 — Bubble Vortex Interactions
05 — Advanced Experimental Methods
06 — Bubble-Solid Interactions and Cavitation Erosion
07 — Bubble-Droplet Interactions
08 — Bubble-Soft Matter Interaction
09 — Hydrofoils and Supercavitation
10 — Fuel Injection and Nozzles
11 — Marine Propulsors and Turbomachinery
12 — Acoustics and Underwater Radiated Noise
13 — Applications of AI and Machine Learning to Cavitation
Abstract Format
The extended abstract should be no more than 2 pages (including figures and references), single spaced, single column, on 8.5 × 11 inch (Letter) paper, using Times New Roman 12pt, with 1 inch margins on all sides. Abstracts outside the page limit will not be considered.
A sample abstract will be provided here: [MS Word] [PDF] (links TBD)
The extended abstract must include:
- Title, author name(s), and affiliation(s). Email address for the corresponding author.
- One or two topic area(s) from the list above.
- Introduction — brief background and objectives.
- Approach — how the objectives will be met.
- Results — key findings with representative figures.
- Key references.
- Acknowledgements — all funding sources.
Abstracts in PDF format are to be submitted via the online submission system no later than September 14, 2026.
Copyright
CAV2027 holds no copyright on material presented and published as part of the Symposium. Authors retain full rights to publish their work in other journals.
Contact
For issues with abstract or paper submission: cav2027@utexas.edu