Philip Drazin

British mathematician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish mathematician
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
wasMathematician
Work fieldMathematics
Gender
Male
Birth1934
Death2002 (aged 68 years)
The details

Biography

Philip Gerald Drazin (1934–2002) was a British mathematician, working in fluid dynamics.
He completed his PhD at the University of Cambridge under G. I. Taylor in 1958. He was awarded the Smith's Prize in 1957. After leaving Cambridge, he spent two years at MIT before moving to the University of Bristol, where he stayed and became a Professor until retiring in 1999. After retiring, he lectured at the University of Oxford and the University of Bath until his death in 2002.
Drazin worked on hydrodynamic stability and the transition to turbulence. His 1974 paper On a model of instability of a slowly-varying flow introduced the concept of a global mode solution to a system of partial differential equations such as the Navier-Stokes equations. He also worked on solitons.
In 1998 he was awarded the Symons Gold Medal of the Royal Meteorological Society

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