Misplaced Pages

John Ockendon

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

John Richard Ockendon
Terracotta bust at St Catherine's College
Alma materUniversity of Oxford
AwardsFellow of the Royal Society (1999)
IMA Gold Medal (2006)
Scientific career
FieldsApplied mathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Oxford
ThesisSome problems in fluid dynamics (1965)
Doctoral advisorAlan Breach Tayler
Website

Professor John Richard Ockendon FRS (born c. 1940) is an applied mathematician noted especially for his contribution to fluid dynamics and novel applications of mathematics to real world problems. He is a professor at the University of Oxford and an Emeritus Fellow at St Catherine's College, Oxford, the first director of the Oxford Centre for Collaborative Applied Mathematics (OCCAM) and a former director of the Smith Institute for Industrial Mathematics and System Engineering.

Education

Ockendon was educated at the University of Oxford where he was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy degree in 1965 for research on fluid dynamics supervised by Alan B Tayler.

Research and career

His initial fluid mechanics interests included hypersonic aerodynamics, creeping flow, sloshing and channel flows and leading to flows in porous media, ship hydrodynamics and models for flow separation.

He moved on to free and moving boundary problems. He pioneered the study of diffusion-controlled moving boundary problems in the 1970s his involvement centring on models for phase changes and elastic contact problems all built around the paradigm of the Hele-Shaw free boundary problem. Other industrial collaboration has led to new ideas for lens design, fibre manufacture, extensional and surface-tension- driven flows and glass manufacture, fluidised-bed models, semiconductor device modelling and a range of other problems in mechanics and heat and mass transfer, especially scattering and ray theory, nonlinear wave propagation, nonlinear oscillations, nonlinear diffusion and impact in solids and liquids.

His efforts to promote mathematical collaboration with industry led him to organise annual meetings of the Study Groups with Industry from 1972 to 1989.

Awards and honours

He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1999, and awarded the Gold Medal of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications in 2006.

Personal life

Ockendon is married to coauthor and colleague Hilary Ockendon. In Who's Who he lists his recreations as mathematical modelling, bird watching, Hornby-Dublo model trains and old sports cars.

References

  1. ^ John Ockendon at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. Ockendon, John Richard (1965). Some problems in fluid dynamics (DPhil thesis). University of Oxford. OCLC 941068799.
  3. Ockendon, H.; Ockendon, J. R. (1998). "Alan Breach Tayler". Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society. 30 (4): 429–431. doi:10.1112/S0024609397003251.
  4. "IMA Gold Medal". Retrieved 16 May 2018. Institute of Mathematics and its Applications
  5. Rundle, John B.; Turcotte, Donald (1996). "Turcotte receives Whitten medal". Eos: Transactions of the American Geophysical Union. 77 (10): 95. doi:10.1029/96eo00063.
Fellows of the Royal Society elected in 1999
Fellows
Foreign


Stub icon

This article about a United Kingdom mathematician is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: