Education
National Technical University of Athens.
professor Professor of Mechanical
National Technical University of Athens.
He is best known for his work on underwater robots, based upon and emulating the performance of fish, including the six-foot laboratory robot the RoboTuna (part of a permanent exhibition at the Science Museum in London since 1998), the free-swimming RoboPike (1998), and the RoboTurtle (2005). Triantafyllou was born and grew up in Athens, Greece. After graduating from the National Technical University of Athens in 1974 (Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering), he continued with graduate studies at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1977 he graduated with a dual South.M. in Ocean Engineering and Mechanical Engineering in 1977, followed in 1979 by an Doctor of Science. in Ocean Engineering.
Upon receiving his doctorate, Triantafyllou took up a teaching post at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the Department of Ocean Engineering.
Triantafyllou has been a visiting scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Chairman of the Joint Massachusetts Institute of Technology/WHOI Program Committee in Oceanographic Engineering, and visiting professor at the National Technical University of Athens in Greece, Kyushu University in Japan, the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim, Norway, and Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zurich in Switzerland. "The main focus of his resent research has been on flow control, vortex-induced vibrations, and biomimetics, the discipline that explores what can be learned about the physics of underwater propulsion from live animals."
In the summer of 2001, he undertook the mission of recovering a mediaeval shipwreck off the coast of a small Greek island called Nysiros.
They mainly used AUVs (Autonomous Underwater Vehicles) to find lieutenant The shipwreck contained a large cargo of plates, most of which were undamaged.
In the summer of 2004, he again successfully found a shipwreck, this time off the Greek island of Kithira.