Hermann Flaschka

Hermann Flaschka
Born (1945-03-25) March 25, 1945
Öblarn, Austria
Residence Tucson, Arizona
Nationality United States
Fields Mathematics, Mathematical physics
Institutions University of Arizona
Alma mater Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Doctoral advisor Gilbert Strang
Doctoral students Randolph Schilling - Particle Representations for Finite Gap Operators (1982), Pantelis Andrea Damianou - Nonlinear Poisson Brackets (1989), Maorong Zou - The Geometry of Two Degree of Freedom Integrable Hamiltonian Systems (1992), Francisco Solis - Geometric Aspects of Local Adaptive Galerkin Bases (1993), Mohamed El Hadrami - Poisson Algebras and Convexity (1996), Erin McNicholas - Embedded Tree Structures and Eigenvalue Statistics of Genus Zero One-Face Maps (2006) , Adam Spiegler - Stability of Generic Equilibria of the 2N-dimensional Rigid Body Using the Energy-Casimir Method (2006), Luis Garcia-Naranjo - Almost Poisson Brackets for Nonholonomic Systems on Lie Groups (2007), Bole Yang - Algebraic Aspects of the Dispersionless Limit of the Discrete Nonlinear Schrödinger Equation (2013) [1][2]
Notable awards Norbert Wiener Prize

Herman Flaschka (born 25 March 1945) is a well-known Austrian born mathematical physicist and Professor of Mathematics at the University of Arizona, known for his important contributions in completely integrable systems (soliton equations).

Childhood

He's been living in the USA since his family immigrated when he was a teenager. They lived in Atlanta, GA. His father Hermenegild Arved Flaschka (1915 - )[3] taught Chemistry at Georgia Tech.[4] Hermann graduated from Druid Hills High School with the class of 1962 and received his Bachelor's degree at Georgia Tech in 1967.[5] Among other achievements there he also received the "William Gilmer Perry Awards for Freshman English" in 1963, despite the fact that he's not a native speaker.[6]

Career

He received his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1970. His advisor was Gilbert Strang and the title of his thesis Asymptotic Expansions and Hyperbolic Equations with Multiple Characteristics. He then worked as post-doc at the Carnegie Mellon University until 1972. Currently he is Professor at the University of Arizona.

He has lectured as visiting professor at several institutions, among them the Clarkson University (1978/79), the Kyoto RIMS (1980/81) and the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (2002).

In 1995 he received the Norbert Wiener Prize in Applied Mathematics. In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[7]

Work

He made important contributions to the theory of completely integrable systems in particular the Toda lattice and the Korteweg–de Vries equation.

In 1980 he co-founded Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena for which he also served as co-editor for many years.[8] Publisher Elsevier now lists him as honorary editor.[9]

References

External links

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