Everything about James Lighthill totally explained
Sir Michael James Lighthill FRS (
23 January 1924 -
17 July 1998) was a
British applied mathematician, known for his pioneering work in the field of
Aeroacoustics.
Biography
Lighthill specialised in
fluid dynamics, and worked at the
National Physical Laboratory,
Trinity College, Cambridge and between
1946 and
1959 at the
University of Manchester where he held the
Beyer Chair. Lighthill then moved from Manchester to become director of the
Royal Aircraft Establishment at
Farnborough. There he worked on the development of television and communications
satellites, and on the development of manned
spacecraft. This latter work was used in the development of the
Concorde supersonic
airliner.
In 1955, together with G. B. Whitham, Lighthill set out the first comprehensive theory of
kinematic waves (an application of the
method of characteristics), with a multitude of applications, prime among them fluid flow and traffic flow.
Lighthill's early work included two dimensional
aerofoil theory, and
supersonic flow around
solids of revolution. In addition to the dynamics of gas at high speeds he studied shock and blast waves. He is credited with founding the subject of aeroacoustics, a subject vital to the reduction of noise in
jet engines.
Lighthill's eighth power law states that the
acoustic power radiated by a jet engine is proportional to the eighth
power of the jet speed. He also founded
non-linear acoustics, and showed that the same non-linear
differential equations could model both flood waves in rivers and traffic flow in highways.
In 1964 he became the
Royal Society's resident professor at
Imperial College London, before returning to Trinity College, Cambridge, five years later as
Lucasian Professor of Mathematics, a chair he held until 1979, when he was succeeded by
Stephen Hawking. Lighthill then became
Provost of
University College London (UCL) - a post he held until 1989.
Lighthill founded the
Institute of Mathematics and its Applications in
1964.
In the early 1970s, partly in reaction to significant internal discord within that field, the British Science and Research Council asked Lighthill to compile a review of academic research in
Artificial Intelligence. Lighthill's report, which was published in
1973 and became known as the "
Lighthill report", was highly critical of basic research in foundational areas such as robotics and language processing, and "formed the basis for the decision by the British government to end support for AI research in all but two universities", starting what is sometimes referred to as the "
AI winter".
Although he'd previously swum around the Island of
Sark on numerous occasions, an attempt in
1998 claimed his life.
Publications
- M. J. Lighthill & G. B. Whitham, On kinematic waves. I. Flood movement in long rivers, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Piccadilly, London, 10 May 1955, A229(1178):281–316
- M. J. Lighthill & G. B. Whitham, On kinematic waves. II. A theory of traffic flow on long crowded roads, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Piccadilly, London, 10 May 1955, A229(1178):317–345
- Lighthill, M. J., An Introduction to Fourier Analysis and Generalised Functions, Cambridge University Press, 1958, ISBN 0-521-09128-4
- Lighthill, Sir James, Mathematical Biofluiddynamics, Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, 1975, ISBN 0-89871-014-6
- Lighthill, M. J., Waves in Fluids. Cambridge University Press, 1978. ISBN 0-521-01045-4
- Lighthill, M. J. An Informal Introduction to Theoretical Fluid Mechanics. Oxford University Press, 1986, ISBN 0-19-853630-5
- Collected Papers of Sir James Lighthill: 4 Volume Set ISBN 0-19-509222-8
Further Information
Get more info on 'James Lighthill'.
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