Julian Cole

American mathematician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican mathematician
PlacesUnited States of America
wasMathematician Engineer Professor Educator
Work fieldAcademia Engineering Mathematics
Gender
Male
Birth2 April 1925, Brooklyn, USA
Death17 April 1999Albany, USA (aged 74 years)
Star signAries
Education
Cornell University
California Institute of Technology
Awards
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship 
Theodore von Kármán Prize1984
Fellow of the American Physical Society 
Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics 
Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 
The details

Biography

Julian David Cole (born April 2, 1925 in Brooklyn, died April 17, 1999 in Albany, New York) was an American mathematician. He is known for his groundbreaking work in mathematical applications to aerodynamics and transonic flow, and in non-linear equations more generally. He graduated 36 PhD students and won many of the most significant scientific honors over his career, including simultaneous election to the National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Engineering in 1976.

Biography

Cole earned an undergraduate degree in engineering from Cornell, after which he entered Caltech as a graduate student. He worked with Hans Liepmann and Paco Lagerstrom, the latter his advisor, submitting a dissertation on transonic flow in 1949. Lagerstrom and Cole continued their work, having formed a small research group at GALCIT to better understand the mathematics of fluid flow. These two, along with Leon Trilling found that flows having weak shocks could be described by Burgers' equation, for which Cole later found a clever transformation to solve it. Cole continued to delve deeper into this topic for the next decade.

Cole took sabbatical in 1963-1964 at Harvard, where he wrote a book on this body of work: Perturbation Methods in Applied Mathematics.

Cole is the namesake of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics's Julian Cole Lectureship.

Awards

  • Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences
  • Fellow, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
  • Fellow, American Physical Society
  • National Academy of Engineering
  • National Academy of Sciences
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 16 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.