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J. Michael T. Thompson

British mathematician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

J. Michael T. Thompson
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John Michael Tutill Thompson (Michael to his friends), born on 7 June 1937 in Cottingham, England, is an Honorary Fellow in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics at the University of Cambridge. He is married with two children.

Quick Facts ProfessorJohn Michael Tutill Thompson, Born ...
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Education and career

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Thompson attended the Hull Grammar School, and studied Mechanical Sciences at Cambridge University (Clare College, 1955–61), winning the three top prizes of the Engineering Faculty: the Rex Moir Prize for Part I of the Tripos, the Archibald Denny Prize for Part II, and the John Winbolt Prize for a research essay. His doctoral thesis (PhD, 1962) under the supervision of (Lord) Henry Chilver[1] was devoted to the buckling of thin spherical shells.[2] He spent three more years at Cambridge as a research fellow at Peterhouse.

He joined the department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at University College London (UCL) in 1964, where he was professor from 1977-2002. Here he built up an internationally recognized group in structural stability, organized an IUTAM (International Union of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics) Symposium [3] and wrote an authoritative book on the underlying general theory.[4] Two more books on the buckling of engineering structures quickly followed [5][6] and he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1985.

His research interests were shifting to dynamics and his book Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos (1986) sold 14,000 copies and had a major world-wide impact by introducing recent mathematical developments to engineers and applied scientists.[7] His research activity in this period included the discovery of chaos in impacting system,[8] and the establishment of a new design criterion for the integrity of systems against basin erosion by incursive fractals.[9][10]

As a senior fellow of the UK Science and Engineering Research Council (1988–93) he was the founder and director of the UCL Centre for Nonlinear Dynamics and its Applications (1991-2002) which was renowned for its application of advanced mathematics to practical problems in (for example) off-shore engineering. The centre hosted an IUTAM Symposium [11] in 1993, and Thompson was for 10 years (1998-2007) a vigorous and innovative editor of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, the world’s longest running scientific journal.[12][13] His later research developed the static-dynamic analogy,[14] delineating spatial chaos in twisted rods and buckling cylinders;[15][16] together with some ideas regarding climate change.[17]

A workshop in Thompson's honour was held at UCL in April, 2003. The proceedings, published in the journal Nonlinear Dynamics [18] included a biographical article by Lord Chilver. Later, for his 75th birthday, a special issue of Phil. Trans. R. Soc. was edited by Isaac Elishakoff,[19] for which Thompson wrote a paper offering advice to young researchers.[20]

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Appointments

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IUTAM Symposia organised at UCL

  • Collapse: the buckling of structures in theory and practice, 1982
  • Nonlinearity and chaos in engineering dynamics, 1993

Principal honours and awards

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Books published

  • A General Theory of Elastic Stability, Wiley, London, 1973
  • Instabilities & Catastrophes in Science and Engineering, Wiley, Chichester, 1982 (Translations: Russian, Japanese)
  • Elastic Instability Phenomena, Wiley, Chichester, 1984
  • Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos, geometrical methods for engineers and scientists, Wiley, Chichester, 1986 (Translations: Japanese, Italian). Second Edition, 2002.

Sources

References

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