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词条 Cathleen Synge Morawetz
释义

  1. Childhood

  2. Education

  3. Career

  4. Honors

  5. Publications

  6. Personal life

  7. References

  8. External links

{{Infobox scientist
| name = Cathleen S. Morawetz
| image = Cathleen_Synge_Morawetz.jpg
| image_size =
| image_upright =
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1923|5|5|mf=yes}}
| birth_place = Toronto, Ontario, Canada
| death_date = {{death date and age|2017|8|8|1923|5|5|mf=yes}}
| death_place = New York City, New York, U.S.A.
| nationality=Canadian
| fields = Mathematics
| workplaces = New York University
| alma_mater = New York University
University of Toronto
| thesis_title =
| thesis_url =
| thesis_year =
| doctoral_advisor = Kurt Otto Friedrichs
| doctoral_students =
| known_for =
| awards =
}}Cathleen Synge Morawetz (May 5, 1923 – August 8, 2017) was a Canadian mathematician who spent much of her career in the United States.[1] Morawetz's research was mainly in the study of the partial differential equations governing fluid flow, particularly those of mixed type occurring in transonic flow.[1] She was professor emerita at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at the New York University, where she had also served as director from 1984 to 1988.[3] She was awarded the National Medal of Science in 1998.[2]

Childhood

Morawetz's father, John Lighton Synge, nephew of John Millington Synge, was an Irish mathematician, specializing in the geometry of general relativity. Her mother also studied mathematics for a time. Her uncle was Edward Hutchinson Synge who is credited as the inventor of the Near-field scanning optical microscope.[3]

Her childhood was split between Ireland and Canada. Both her parents were supportive of her interest in mathematics and science, and it was a woman mathematician, Cecilia Krieger, who had been a family friend for many years who later encouraged Morawetz to pursue a Ph.D. in mathematics. Morawetz said her father was influential in stimulating her interest in mathematics, but he wondered whether her studying mathematics would be wise (suggesting they might fight like the Bernoulli brothers).[3]

Education

A graduate of the University of Toronto in 1945, Morawetz received her master's degree in 1946 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Morawetz got a job at New York University where she edited Supersonic Flow and Shock Waves by Richard Courant and Kurt Otto Friedrichs. She earned her Ph.D. in 1951 at New York University, with a thesis on the stability of a spherical implosion, under the supervision of Kurt Otto Friedrichs.[4][5] Her thesis was entitled Contracting Spherical Shocks Treated by a Perturbation Method[4]

Career

After earning her doctorate, Morawetz spent a year as a research associate at MIT before returning to work as a research associate at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at NYU, for five more years. During this time she had no teaching requirements and could focus purely on research. She published work on a variety of topics in applied mathematics including viscosity, compressible fluids and transonic flows. Even if an aircraft remains subsonic, the air flowing around the wing can reach supersonic velocity. The mix of air at supersonic and subsonic velocity creates shock waves that can slow the airplane.

Turning to the mathematics of transonic flow, she showed that specially designed shockless airfoils could not, in fact, prevent shocks. Shocks developed in response to even small perturbations, such as a gust of wind or an imperfection in a wing.[6] This discovery opened up the problem of developing a theory for a flow with shocks. Subsequently, the shocks she predicted mathematically now have been observed in experiments as air flows around the wing of a plane.[7]

In 1957 she became an assistant professor at Courant. At this point she began to work more closely with her colleagues publishing important joint papers with Peter Lax and Ralph Phillips on the decay of solutions to the wave equation around a star shaped obstacle. She continued with important solo work on the wave equation and transonic flow around a profile until she was promoted to full professor by 1965.

At this point her research expanded to a variety of problems including papers on the Tricomi equation the nonrelativistic wave equation including questions of decay and scattering. Her first doctoral student, Lesley Sibner, was graduated in 1964. In the 1970s she worked on questions of scattering theory and the nonlinear wave equation. She proved what is now known as the Morawetz Inequality. She died on August 8, 2017 in New York City.[8]

Honors

In 1980 Morawetz won a Lester R. Ford Award.[9] In 1981, she became the first woman to deliver the Gibbs Lecture of The American Mathematical Society,[4][10] and in 1982 presented an Invited Address at a meeting of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. She received honorary degrees from Eastern Michigan University in 1980, Brown University, and Smith College in 1982, and Princeton in 1990.[4] In 1983 and in 1988, she was selected as a Noether Lecturer. She was named Outstanding Woman Scientist for 1993 by the Association for Women in Science.[4] In 1995, she became the second woman elected to the office of president of the American Mathematical Society.[4] In 1996, she was awarded an honorary ScD degree by Trinity College Dublin, where her father JL Synge had been a student and later a faculty member.[11] In 1998 she was awarded the National Medal of Science; she was the first woman to receive the medal for work in mathematics.[4] In 2004 she received the Leroy P. Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement. In 2006 she won the George David Birkhoff Prize in Applied Mathematics.[4] In 2012 she became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[12]

Morawetz was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and was the first woman to belong to the Applied Mathematics Section of that organization.[4]

Publications

  • {{Cite journal

|journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series A
|title=Note on a Maximum Principle and a Uniqueness Theorem for an Elliptic-Hyperbolic Equation
|last=Morawetz |first=Cathleen
|authorlink=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|date=10 July 1956
|doi=10.1098/rspa.1956.0119
|jstor=99873
|volume=236 |issue=1204
|pages=141–144
|ref=harv
}}
  • {{Cite journal

|journal=Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics
|title=On the non-existence of continuous transonic flows past profiles I
|last=Morawetz |first=Cathleen
|authorlink=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|authormask=2
|year=1956
|doi=10.1002/cpa.3160090104
|volume=9 |issue=1
|pages=45–68
|ref=harv
}}
  • {{Cite journal

|journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series A
|title=Time Decay for the Nonlinear Klein-Gordon Equation
|last=Morawetz |first=Cathleen S.
|authorlink=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|authormask=2
|date=10 September 1968
|volume=306 |issue=1486
|doi=10.1098/rspa.1968.0151
|jstor=2416107
|pages=291–296
|ref={{harvid|Morawetz|1968}}
}}
  • {{Cite journal

|journal=Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Section A
|title=On the Modes of Decay for the Wave Equation in the Exterior of a Reflecting Body
|last=Morawetz |first=Cathleen Synge
|authorlink=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|authormask=2
|year=1972
|volume=72
|issue=
|doi=
|jstor=20488719
|pages=113–120
|ref=harv
}}
  • {{Cite journal

|journal=The American Mathematical Monthly
|title=Nonlinear conservation equations
|last=Morawetz |first=Cathleen
|authorlink=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|authormask=2
|volume=86
|issue=4
|year=1979
|pages=284–287
|url=http://www.maa.org/programs/maa-awards/writing-awards/nonlinear-conservation-equations
|doi=10.2307/2320747
|ref=harv
|jstor=2320747
  • {{Cite journal

|journal=The American Mathematical Monthly
|title=Geometrical Optics and the Singing of Whales
|last=Morawetz |first=Cathleen
|authorlink=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|authormask=2
|year=1978
|volume=85 |issue=7
|doi=10.2307/2320862
|jstor=2320862
|pages=548–554
|ref=harv
}}
  • {{cite journal

|journal=Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society (N.S.)
|title=The mathematical approach to the sonic barrier
|last=Morawetz |first=Cathleen
|authorlink=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|authormask=2
|year=1982
|volume=6 |issue=2
|pages=127–145
|mr=640941
|doi=10.1090/s0273-0979-1982-14965-5
|ref=harv
}}
  • {{Cite journal

|journal=SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics
|title=The Calculations of an Inverse Potential Problem
|last=Morawetz |first=Cathleen
|authorlink=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|first2=Gregory A. |last2=Kriegsmann
|date=August 1983
|volume=43 |issue=4
|doi=10.1137/0143055
|jstor=2101366
|pages=844–854
|ref=harv
}}
  • {{Cite journal

|journal=Mathematics of Computation
|title=Scattering by a Potential Using Hyperbolic Methods
|last=Bayliss |first=Alvin
|last2=Li |first2=Yanyan
|last3=Morawetz |first3=Cathleen
|authorlink3=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|date=April 1989
|volume=52 |issue=186
|doi=10.2307/2008470
|jstor=2008470
|pages=321–338
|ref=harv
}}
  • {{Cite journal

|journal=The American Mathematical Monthly
|title=Giants
|last=Morawetz |first=Cathleen S.
|authorlink=Cathleen Synge Morawetz
|authormask=2
|date=November 1992
|volume=99 |issue=9
|doi=10.2307/2324117
|jstor=2324117
|pages=819–828
|ref=harv
}}

Personal life

Morawetz lived in Greenwich Village with her husband Herbert Morawetz, a polymer chemist. They had four children, eight grandchildren, and one great grandchild. Their children are Pegeen Rubinstein, John, Lida Jeck, and Nancy Morawetz (a professor at New York University School of Law who manages its Immigrant Rights Clinic).

Upon being honored by the National Organization for Women for successfully combining career and family, Morawetz quipped, "Maybe I became a mathematician because I was so crummy at housework." She said her current non-mathematical interests are "grandchildren and sailing."[4]

References

1. ^[https://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/morawetz.htm Science Lives: Cathleen Morawetz] Simons Foundation
2. ^{{cite journal|url=http://www.ams.org/notices/199903/comm-morawetz.pdf|title=Cathleen Morawetz Receives National Medal of Science|journal=Notices of the American Mathematical Society|volume=46|issue=3|page=352|date=March 1999|first=Allyn|last=Jackson}}
3. ^{{macTutor|id=Synge|title=John Lighton Synge}}
4. ^10 11 {{cite web|last=Knowles|first=Tyler|title=Cathleen Morawetz|url=http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/morawetz.htm|work=Biographies of Women Mathematicians|publisher=Agnes Scott College|accessdate=4 April 2014}}
5. ^{{MathGenealogy|id=19967}}
6. ^Chang, Kenneth, Cathleen Morawetz, 94; used math in study of motion, New York Times, August 13, 2017, p. 18
7. ^{{MacTutor|id=Morawetz}}
8. ^Paid death notice The New York Times, Aug 10, 2017
9. ^{{cite journal|author=Morawetz, Cathleen S.|title=Nonlinear conservation equations|journal=The American Mathematical Monthly|volume=86|issue=4|year=1979|pages=284–287|url=http://www.maa.org/programs/maa-awards/writing-awards/nonlinear-conservation-equations|doi=10.2307/2320747|jstor=2320747}}
10. ^{{cite journal|author=Morawetz, Cathleen Synge|title=The mathematical approach to the sonic barrier|journal=Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society (N.S.)|year=1982|volume=6|issue=2|pages=127–145|mr=640941|doi=10.1090/s0273-0979-1982-14965-5}}
11. ^[https://www.tcd.ie/registrar/honorary-degrees/recipients.php Honorary Degree Recipients 1972–2018] Trinity College Dublin
12. ^List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2013-02-10.
{{PlanetMath attribution|id=9693|title=Cathleen Morawetz}}
  • {{Cite journal

|journal=Science
|title=Cathleen Morawetz: The Mathematics of Waves
|author=Gina Bari Kolata
|date=12 October 1979
|doi=10.1126/science.206.4415.206
|jstor=1749436
|volume=206 |issue=4415
|pages=206–207
|ref={{harvid|Morawetz, Science|1979}}
}}

External links

  • {{cite journal | last = Sormani | first = Christina |date=August 2018 | title = The Mathematics of Cathleen Synge Morawetz | journal = Notices of the American Mathematical Society | volume = 65 | issue = 7 | pages = 764–778 | url = http://www.ams.org/journals/notices/201807/rnoti-p764.pdf | format = PDF}}
{{Winners of the National Medal of Science|math-stat-comp}}{{AMS Presidents|state=collapsed}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Morawetz, Cathleen Synge}}

29 : 1923 births|2017 deaths|20th-century mathematicians|Canadian expatriate academics in the United States|Canadian mathematicians|Canadian women academics|Irish women mathematicians|Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni|Mathematical analysts|National Medal of Science laureates|Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences alumni|Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences faculty|PDE theorists|University of Toronto alumni|Canadian women mathematicians|Fellows of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics|Fellows of the American Mathematical Society|Presidents of the American Mathematical Society|Members of the United States National Academy of Sciences|Guggenheim Fellows|Scientists from New York City|Scientists from Toronto|American mathematicians|New York University alumni|20th-century women mathematicians|20th-century Canadian mathematicians|21st-century Canadian mathematicians|21st-century women mathematicians|Mathematicians from New York (state)

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