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         Lighthill Sir James:     more detail
  1. Newer Uses of Mathematics by Sir James Lighthill, 1978-02-23
  2. Sir James Lighthill and Modern Fluid Mechanics by Lokenath Debnath, 2008-09-30
  3. Collected Papers of Sir James Lighthill: 4 Volume Set by Sir M. James Lighthill, 1996-12-05
  4. Waves in Fluids by Sir James Lighthill, 1978-05-31
  5. A Critical Review of Van: Earthquake Prediction from Seismic Electrical Signals
  6. Telecommunications in the 1980's and After (Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society) by James, Sir Lighthill, Eric Eastwood, 1978-08
  7. Recollections of Sir James Lighthill 1924-1998 by Unknown, 1999-01-01
  8. Waves in Liquids and Gases (S.Brodetsky Memorial Lecture) by Sir James Lighthill, 1966-11
  9. Dynamics of Ionized Gases: International Symposium Proceedings
  10. Collected Papers of Sir James Lighthill: 4 Volume Set by M. James Lighthill M. Yousuff Hussaini, 1996

61. DGLR E.V.
Translate this page Dr.rer.nat. Dr.-Ing.Eh, Gauting. 1983, lighthill, sir james, FRS, Provost, London,UK. 1984, Goethert, Bernhard H., Prof. Dr.-Ing., Dean Emeritus, Tullahoma, USA.
http://www.dglr.de/ehrungen/preistraeger.html
    Ehrenmitglieder der DGLR
    Korrespondierende Mitglieder

    Lectureship Awards
    Dornier, Claude, Prof. Dr.-Ing.E.h., Friedrichshafen Handley Page, Sir Frederick, London, UK Focke, Henrich, Prof. Dr.-Ing.E.h., Bremen Blenk, Hermann, Prof. Dr.phil, Braunschweig Roy, Maurice, Prof. Dr.-Ing.E.h. Dr.rer.nat.h.c., Paris, France Busemann, Adolf, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Dr.h.c., Boulder, USA Gabrielli, Giuseppe, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Dr.-Ing.E.h, Turin, Italy Liepmann, Hans Wolfgang, Prof. Dr.phil., Pasadena, USA Legendre, Robert, Prof., Paris, France Oswatitsch, Klaus, Prof. Dr. Dr.-Ing.E.h., Wien, Austria Sears, William R., Prof. Dr., Tucson, USA Quick, August W., Prof. Dr.-Ing., Aachen Young, Alec David, Prof., London, UK Jones, Robert T., Prof., Moffett Field, USA Schultz-Grunow, Fritz, Prof. Dr.sc.techn. Dr.-Ing.E.h. Senator E.h., Aachen Wagner, Herbert A., Prof. Dr.-Ing. Dr.-Ing. E.h., Wien, Austria Magnus, Kurt, Prof. Dr.rer.nat. Dr.-Ing.E.h., Gauting Lighthill, Sir James, FRS, Provost, London, UK Goethert, Bernhard H., Prof. Dr.-Ing., Dean Emeritus, Tullahoma, USA Crocco, Luigi, Prof. Dr., Roma, Italy

62. SBS Template
Past SBS Distinguished Lectures. 1987 sir james lighthill, FRS, Provostof UCL. 1988 Lord Adrian, FRS, Master of Pembroke College
http://www.savebritishscience.org.uk/about/agmlectures.html
home join us aims documents ... links Past SBS Distinguished Lectures
1987: Sir James Lighthill, FRS, Provost of UCL 1988: Lord Adrian, FRS, Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge, member of the House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology and of the SBS Advisory Council 1989: Michael Heseltine, MP
1992: Prof. J.M.Howie, FRSE
1993: John Smith, MP, leader of the opposition 1995: Sir Derek Roberts CBE FRS FEng, Provost of UCL
1996: Ian Taylor MBE MP, Minister for Science
1997: Margaret Beckett MP, President of the Board of Trade 1998: John Redwood MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Trade and Industry
1999: Dr Andrew Mackenzie, Group Vice President of Technology at BP Amoco
2000: Dr Mike Dexter, Director of the Wellcome Trust
2002: Professor Sir Harold Kroto FRS, Nobel Laureate, member of the SBS Advisory Council
2003: Sir Gareth Roberts, President of Wolfson College, Oxford, and of the Science Council

63. FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS On SOUND And VIBRATION
Berlin, Germany Finn Jacobsen, Lyngby, Denmark Govindappa Krishnappa, Ottawa, CanadaConny Larsson, Uppsala, Sweden sir james lighthill, London, England Leonid
http://www.ipme.ru/ipme/conf/congress/congress.html
FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS on SOUND and VIBRATION
to be held at Hotel St. Petersburg
St. Petersburg, Russia
June 24-27, 1996
Sponsored by:
The International Institute of Acoustics and Vibration
The Baltic State Technical University in cooperation with the following professional societies:
Russian Academy of Sciences
Russian Acoustical Society
Czech Acoustical Society
Schweizererische Gesellschaft fur Akustik
Acoustical Society of India
International Association Against Noise
Acoustical Society of Korea
The Southern African Acoustics Institute General Chairman:
Professor Nikolay I. Ivanov, St. Petersburg, Russia Scientific Chairman:
Professor Alexey S. Nikiforov, St. Petersburg, Russia Programme Chairman:
Professor Malcolm J. Crocker, Auburn, USA
Scientific Committee:
Adnan Akay, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Simon G. Braun, Haifa, Israel
Nickolay A. Dubrovsky, Moscow, Russia
Zbignew Engel, Krakow, Poland
J. L. Guyader, Villeurbanne, France
Colin Hansen, Adelaide, Australia
Hanno Heller, Braunschweig, Germany
Keng D. Hsueh, Dearborn, MI, USA

64. The Age Of Intelligent Machines: Intelligent Knowledge-Based Systems--AI In The
by the Science Research Council toward the end of the 1950s, was a major setbackfor AI work in the UK In this report sir james lighthill suggested that one
http://www.kurzweilai.net/articles/art0308.html?printable=1

65. Contact Points
Dr C Ball (USA), Professor sir james lighthill (Deceased). Professor T. Beppu(Japan), Professor MD Lilly (Deceased). sir Austin Bide (UK), Dr. CR Lowe (UK).
http://www.kent.ac.uk/bio/iibmircen/contacts.htm
Contact Points
Check our new IIB News page
Directors, Executive Secretary and Fellows of IIB
Contact Address:
International Institute of Biotechnology
Biotechnology MIRCEN
1/13 Innovation Building 1000,
Sittingbourne Research Centre,
Sittingbourne,
Kent ME9 8HL
UK
Tel: +44 (0)1795-411541
Fax: +44 (0)1795-411521 Dr. John C. Dodd
Director Biotechnology MIRCEN/Executive Secretary IIB
e-mail: jcdodd@iibiotech.fsbusiness.co.uk Professor Alan T. Bull Director of IIB e-mail: A.T.Bull@kent.ac.uk Professor Jim Lynch Director of IIB e-mail: J.Lynch@surrey.ac.uk Professor Rita Colwell Honorary Director of IIB
Fellows of IIB (F.I.Biotech)
The Institute's Fellowship currently comprises the following individuals: Professor M. Alexander (USA) Dr Tony Knap (Bermuda) Professor Sir Geoffrey Allen (UK) Professor Sir Hans Kornberg (USA) Professor Sir J Arbuthnott (UK) Dr. N.W.F. Kossen (Netherlands)

66. ICTAM 2000 - CB1
Paper CB1—Monday, 28 Aug 2000, at 1630. Microbiological fluiddynamics A tribute to sir james lighthill. John R. Blake School
http://www.tam.uiuc.edu/ICTAM2000/Program/Abstracts/CB1.html
Microbiological fluid dynamics: A tribute to Sir James Lighthill
John R. Blake
School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom Abstract J.R.Blake@bham.ac.uk
ICSU IUTAM ICTAM 2000
File updated 22 Aug 2000 by jwp@uiuc.edu at UIUC

67. ICTAM 2000 - Session CB
Title of presentation. CB1, 1630, John R. Blake, Microbiologicalfluid dynamics A tribute to sir james lighthill. CB2, 1650, Timothy
http://www.tam.uiuc.edu/ICTAM2000/Program/Index_to_papers/CB.html
Lecture Session
Chair: Andreas Acrivos
City University of New York, USA Paper Time Authors (presenting author listed first) Title of presentation John R. Blake Microbiological fluid dynamics: A tribute to Sir James Lighthill Timothy J. Pedley and Vanesa Magar Model of nutrient uptake by a spherical squirming micro-organism Stanley A. Berger and Brian E. Carlson Flow of sickle cell blood in a microcirculatory bed Z. Jane Wang Unsteady aerodynamics of insect flight John O. Kessler Turbulence, mixing, and dynamics of bacterial suspensions
ICSU IUTAM ICTAM 2000
File updated 22 Aug 2000 by jwp@uiuc.edu at UIUC

68. IN BRIEF
sir james lighthill, brilliant mathematician who foresaw the use ofcommunications satellites and space shuttles, has died aged 74.
http://www.ercim.org/publication/Ercim_News/enw35/inbrief35.html
subscribe search back issues on-line order back issues ERCIM website quick index ERCIM home page ACTIVITIES Scientific fields of competence EU-NSF strategic workshops 10 years ERCIM Working Groups Event Sponsorship Fellowship Programme Cor Baayen award Projects Future ERCIM Events Past ERCIM Events PUBLICATIONS ERCIM News Annual report Technical Reports Workshop Proceedings Prospective Reports Strategic Reports Members' Libraries ABOUT ERCIM Organizational structure Members ERCIM office Board of Directors Executive Committee Logos for Download Posters LINKS Job opportunities Calendar of Events Spin-off Companies WORKSPACES Archives (restricted) BSCW server (restricted)
ERCIM News No.35 - October 1998 INRIA - INRIA - Jean-Pierre Merlet , Senior Scientist at INRIA Sophia-Antipolis, head of the SAGA project proposal, has received a special mention from the Jury of the Altran Foundation Prize, Innovation, pain, deficiencies and physical handicap. The micro-robot that has received the prize, under development at INRIA can be used for inspection as well as surgery proper. It is less than 1cm in diameter, it is bio-compatible and transparent with respect to NMR and radiological apparatus. It may be autonomous, because its head contains both a source of energy and control, which is activated remotely. CNUCE-CNR - The Michelangelo prize, awarded annually by the town of Carrara and the province of Massa-Carrara for an original work of art, was won this year by the cyber painter

69. Information For Authors
Stress Valery M. Tsaplev. Volume 3, Number 1, March 1998. A Century ofShock Wave Dynamics sir james lighthill. The Influence of Geometric
http://www.rcom.ru/IJAV/articles.htm
LIST OF ARTICLES
Volume 1, Number 1 December 1996 Volume 2, Number 1 March 1997 Volume 2, Number 2 June 1997 Volume 2, Number 3 September 1997 Volume 2, Number 4 December 1997 Volume 3, Number 1 March 1998 Volume 3, Number 2 June 1998 Volume 3, Number 3 September 1998 Volume 3, Number 4 December 1998 Volume 4, Number 1 March 1999 Volume 4, Number 2 June 1999 Volume 4, Number 3 September 1999 Volume 4, Number 4 December 1999 Volume 5, Number 1 March 2000 Volume 5, Number 2 June 2000 Volume 5, Number 3 September 2000 Volume 5, Number 4 December 2000 Volume 6, Number 1 March 2001 Volume 6, Number 2 June 2001 Volume 6, Number 3 September 2001 Volume 6, Number 4 December 2001 Volume 7, Number 1 March 2002 Volume 7, Number 2 June 2002 Volume 7, Number 3 September 2002 Volume 7, Number 4 December 2002 Volume 8, Number 1 March 2003 Volume 8, Number 2 June 2003 Volume 8, Number 3 September 2003 Volume 8, Number 4 December 2003 Volume 9, Number 1 March 2004
Volume 1, Number 1, December 1996
    Recent Advances in Interpreting Hearing Sensitivity
    James Lighthill Wavelet Analysis of Vibration Signals. Part 1: Wavelet Properties
    David E. Newland

70. Towards More Balanced Inquiry And Response In Psychological Health
The 1986 apology came through the late sir james lighthill, who took over the Lucasianchair in applied mathematics at Cambridge from Paul Dirac in 1969,
http://www.goodshare.org/restore.htm
Towards More Balanced Inquiry and Response in Psychological Health Victoria, May 3, 2002 http://www.goodshare.org/restore.htm The following is directed to those suffering from 'mental illness' and those in the 'healing professions' who may have interest in helping to develop and to participate in a new 'healing' approach that combines the wisdom of native 'healing' traditions with new scientific findings on the fundamentals of living systems that have not yet been assimilated into mainstream psychiatry. This new approach orients to the cultivating and sustaining of psychological health through a coordinated program of self-directed 'healing circle' group therapy and neurofeedback ( N.B. -'Neurofeedback' is training that enables one to get in touch with sub-aware neural responses that one has involuntarily 'conditioned' to 'hold on to' anxious, depressive or obsessive thoughts, and to 'untrain' them so that they will 'let go' and stop 'locking-themselves-in'. Neurofeedback equipment presents the patient's own neural waves to them on a computer screen in front of them and facilitates the patient's interacting with their own thought waves using audio-visual signalling, often in the form of playing games like pacman etc. where certain types of mind-movements (thought-wave patterns) are 'reflected back' to the patient in terms of the audio-visual responses of the neurofeedback equipment. This type of interaction with one's own thought waves allows interaction with thought flows that have developed 'sub-awarely' and that are not accessible to normal past, present and future 'event' based thinking.)

71. School Of Mathematics And Statistics
JR Blake. 2001. Microbiological fluid mechanics a tribute to sir james lighthill,Math Meth. Appl. 2001. sir james lighthill 192498, Math Meth. Appl.
http://www.res.bham.ac.uk/publications/researchpubs/2001data/mathsstats.htm
School of Mathematics and Statistics
Applied Mathematics Group
Articles in Academic Journals J Billingham, SJ Preece, AC King. 2001. On the initial stages of cement hydration, Journal of Engineering Mathematics, 43-58. Publication: 1389.
J Billingham, SJ Preece, AC King. 2001. The evolution of travelling waves from chemical clock reactions, Journal of Engineering Mathematics, 367-385. Publication: 1391.
J Billingham, GN Mercer. 2001. The effect of heat loss on the propagation of strongly exothermic combustion waves, Combustion Theory and Modelling, 319-342. Publication: 1392.
JR Blake. 2001. Microbiological fluid mechanics: a tribute to Sir James Lighthill, Math Meth. Appl. Sci., 1469-1483. ISSN: 0170-4214. Publication: 907.
JR Blake. 2001. Sir James Lighthill 1924-98, Math Meth. Appl. Sci., 1307- 1310. ISSN: 0170-4214. Publication: 919.
EJ Crampin, EA Gaffney, PK Maini. 2001. Mode-doubling and tripling in reaction- diffusion patterns on growing domains: A piecewise linear model, Journal of Mathematical Biology

72. General
weitere Infos Waves in Fluids (Cambridge Mathematical Library). von, sir jameslighthill MJ lighthill james lighthill. Erscheinungstermin 01. Dezember 2001.
http://www.ein-gutes-buch.de/EnglishBooks/Science/Mathematics/General/seite3.htm
General
Seite Suchen in: Alle Bücher US-Bücher Pop-Musik Klassik Song-Titel DVD Video Software Suchbegriffe: Suchen in: gesamtes Internet www.ein-gutes-Buch.de Suchbegriffe:
von Peter Deuflhard
Folkmar Bornemann Erscheinungstermin: April 2002 ISBN: Hersteller: Gruyter
weitere Infos...
Lectures on Algebraic Quantum Groups
von Ken A. Brown
Ken R. Goodearl Erscheinungstermin: April 2002 ISBN: Hersteller:
Kurzbeschreibung
weitere Infos...
How Likely is It?: Probability
von James T. Fey
Catherine Anderson
Pauline Phung Erscheinungstermin: Januar 1996 ISBN: Hersteller: Dale Seymour Publications
weitere Infos...
Survival Analysis
von John P. Klein
Melvin L. Moeschberger Erscheinungstermin: 01. Februar 2003 ISBN: Hersteller: Springer-Verlag
Kurzbeschreibung
weitere Infos...
Optimal Control and Estimation (Dover Books on Advanced Mathematics)
von Robert F. Stengel
Stengel Erscheinungstermin: 01. September 1994 ISBN: Hersteller: Dover Publications
weitere Infos...
Computing Tools for Modeling, Optimization and Simulation: Interfaces in Computer Science and Operations Research (Operations Research/Computer Science Interfaces Series)
von Manuel Laguna
Jose Luis Gonzalez Velarde Erscheinungstermin: Januar 2000 ISBN: Hersteller: Kluwer Academic Publishers weitere Infos...

73. Title
had been invited to give lectures in international symposia and national conferencesinvited speakers at a symposium in honor of sir james lighthill (1997), a
http://www.iam.ntu.edu.tw/WWW/02_member/faculty/ccchang/changcc/biograph.htm

74. INTERNATIONAL SOUND AND VIBRATION DIGEST Published By THE
On behalf of sir james lighthill, of London, England, the first President of IIAVand the officers and directors, it is my pleasure to invite you to consider
http://www.auburn.edu/isvd/v2n1aug96.txt
<1/2 decreasing continuously as the disorder increases (i.e. mean free path decreases). The dependence of the exponent as a function of disorder has been explained by analytical calculations using weak localization techniques. This sub-diffusion can be understood in two ways : 1) from weak localization in 2D which essentially recognizes the existence of coherent interferences between arbitrarily complex wave paths when propagated forward and backward; 2) from the geometrical fractal structure of localized eigenmodes in 2D. 1.3 Non-destructive evaluations using ultrasonic waves in multiple-scattering heterogeneous media. We address the question of the identification of a new defect (a damage crack for instance) in a composite medium or a polycrystalline system. Standard ultrasonic non-destructive testing techniques rely on the measurement of the wave which is singly reflected by the scatterer. However, suppose that the medium is highly heterogeneous. In order to minimize the background reflections from the surrounding heterogeneities, low frequencies are used, which lead however to a severe loss of spatial resolution. Here, we report on a technique relying on state-of-the-art analytical calculations, which allows one to identify a new scatterer of the same scattering strength as the typical heterogeneities of the medium, in the large frequency regime, with a resolution of the order of the mean free path of the ultrasonic wave in the scattering medium. The technique consists in measuring the transmission or reflection speckle patterns at different frequencies before and after the introduction of the defect. Then, the average of the square of the difference of the speckle patterns before and after the introduction of the new defect over several tens of frequencies can be shown to be related to the space derivative of the Green function of the diffusion equation with a point source located at the position of the new defect [14,15]. A fit between the theoretical prediction obtained by solving the diffusion equation and the experimentally obtained averaged speckle patterns allows one in principle to retrieve the position of the defect. We have tested this theory by performing extensive numerical simulations with the "wave automaton" in a 2D system of size 256 by 512, a mean free path of 10 and a new scatterer added on one node at different positions inside the system. The positions retrieved from the proposed scheme are in remarkable agreement with their actual values [15]. Potential applications of our approach can be found in medical and industrial imaging in highly scattering systems. We can thus conclude that it is possible to "see" new defects through apparently completely opaque systems using the intrinsic coherent nature of the wave field in random systems! 1.4 Random distributed feedback tunable laser A laser needs two ingredients : 1) a gain so as to amplify pre-existing wave background and 2) a cavity to provide a feedback of the amplified photons which are returned to the amplified medium. Here, we report on the numerical test of the idea proposed a few years ago [16] that Anderson wave localization in a random media can lead to the existence of effective cavities (the localized eigenmodes) which are suitable for the laser feedback. Using the "wave automaton", we have constructed a weakly lossy disordered medium with disorder, presenting in addition a weak saturable gain on a single node of the lattice. Numerical simulations have shown that, starting from an initial white spectrum for the weak background wave noise, coherent amplification of a single frequency occurs, ultimately leading to the existence of a single frequency in the spectrum at large time, hence the demonstration of the laser effect in a disordered system. The "cavity" comes from the Anderson localization effect, as can be verified from the fact that the spatial distribution of the wave energy corresponding to the selected frequency turns out to be precisely one of the linear modes of the disordered medium (in absence of gain) which has the strongest overlap with the node on which the gain is applied. By sweeping the position of the node on which the gain is applied, various different frequencies are selected (in fact as many as the number of nodes) with varying spatial structures, thus leading to the concept of a random distributed feedback tunable laser [17]. In a sense, this result illustrates that a random medium acts similarly to the superposition of many different periodic systems. Similar ideas should be relevant to create coherent phonon sources from heterogeneous media. 2- Acoustic waves and quantum chaos. In 1989, we proposed to use the analogy between the problems of the field loosely called "quantum chaos" and those encountered in high frequency vibrations [18,19] to develop new methods of analysis and new techniques of calculations in this last field. The high frequency (HF) regime is defined as the regime where the wavelength of the wave of interest is small compared to the characteristic size of the structure. As a consequence, many modes participate in the response function of a system in the HF regime. Apart from rough approximations as in the Statistical Energy Analysis approach, there are essentially no theory to tackle this domain. In engineering applications, the HF regime is often encountered and pose formidable problems that are rarely satisfactorily addressed. The analogy and the ensuing techniques described briefly below have been developed in an attempt to improve on this state of affairs. 2.1 Spectral properties The basic question is to quantify the amount of information contained in complex spectra. In contradistinction with common wisdom, we have shown that a lot of information can be extracted beyond the smooth density of state approximation, in particular in the fluctuations of the density of state around its smooth average. In order to illustrate the method, we have examined two different systems : 1) a 3D elastodynamic experiment on aluminium blocks [20] and 2) numerical computations of the vibrations of 2D thin plates [21]. The measured spectra are analyzed with techniques borrowed from the theory of random matrices. The main conclusion is that fluctuations of the spectrum on small scales (involving a few mean eigenfrequency spacings) are well described by the model of Gaussian Orthogonal Ensemble (GOE) of random matrices. In addition, we show that the large scale oscillations of the spectrum (large frequency differences) are due to short periodic orbits (i.e. rays following trajectories that close on themselves) in the corresponding "classical" system (obtained by taking the "eikonal" limit of infinite frequency) and thus yield informations on the size and shape of the aluminium blocks! The influence of the classical ray trajectories is also felt on the eigenmodes of vibrations. It can be shown that some of them present a partial localization of the spatial vibration amplitude pattern ("scar") in the neighborhood of periodic orbits followed by geometrical rays. This result is important for the multipolar nature and the acoustic radiation efficiency of the structure [22]. An efficient and reliable numerical scheme has been developed to compute the acoustic radiation directivity and the total acoustic power radiated by isolated eigenmodes and by finite bandwidth excitations of a membrane of arbitray shape over the whole frequency domain [22]. Results have been obtained for the case of a membrane having the shape of a stadium. This stadium shape, while being simple enough, is in fact representative of the generic properties of complex structures presenting chaotic ray trajectories. The radiation directivity is given by the Fourier transform of the vibration amplitude distribution on the membrane and localization in emission directivty is thus simply controlled by the "scars" of eigenmodes made by resonance on periodic ray orbits. The dependence of the radiation efficiency as a function of the ratio cM/c of the membrane wave velocity cM over the air sound speed c and its important fluctuations from mode to mode has been explained by the theory of random matrices [22]. In the presence of absorption, always present in an experimental situation, eigenfrequencies overlap and any measured spectrum usually takes the form of a complicated "herb"-like function, generally believed to contain no information beyond the average density of state. It turns out that we have been able to show that two-point correlation functions of the spectrum can allow one to identify the nature of the underlying system (integrable or chaotic ray trajectories described respectively by Poissonian or GOE random matrix statistics) and in the same token to get access to the value of the dissipation [23]. In particular, there is a strong interplay between GOE statistics and dissipation that leads to severe erroneous errors when neglected as done in the past. Since most structures for engineering applications are in the GOE or multiple-GOE universality class, our results bear important applications. During this work, new efficient algorithms which allow the computation of a large number (hundreds to thousands) of eigenfrequencies for clamped and freely supported plates and for 3D elastodynamical problems have been developed. An equivalence between the vibration problem of a thin plate and that of a membrane with a complex boundary condition has also been shown [21]. This last result allows to circumvent the problems of stability and precision associated to the calculation of thin plate vibration eigenfrequencies. Also, we have extended the algorithm to calculate a large number of eigenfrequencies and eigenmodes of coupled membranes of arbitrary shapes and study the statistical properties of the spectrum and eigenmode fluctuations [24]. Our results emphasize the large sensitivity of the detailled structure of the spectrum of a classically chaotic system with respect to perturbation such as couplings. However, the global statistical properties are very robust as they pertain to only a few different universality class. 2.2 Time-dependent properties : geometric theory of wave dynamics in chaotic enclosures. Spectral properties are only one facet of waves. As for transport of waves in random media described in =A71, the time-dependent properties of waves in cavities can provide new insights. Furthermore, it turns out to be the relevant view point for the problem of room acoustics, in which one is interested in describing the transient behavior of an acoustic wave launched from a source in an enclosure. Interesting links between the theoretical foundation of room acoustics, whose full wave theory has until recently been lacking, and chaotic ray trajectories in billiards have been recently studied, enabling a better quantification of the various regimes [25,26]. Recently semi-classical time-dependent Green function for the hyperbolic wave equation has been constructed using a summation over quasi-recurrent classical ray trajectories [27]. The finite resolution of the wave problem associated to the smallest wavelength allowed us to introduce a natural coarse-graining which permits to partition the classical rays into bundles forming a Cantor set [28] We have shown the existence of contributions in the sum which correspond to precursors to the classical ray arrival times., which embody the physics of multiple interferences and more precisely a diffraction correction associated to the presence of odd numbers of focal points along the classical ray trajectories. Our global formulation and Green function construction over the classical ray trajectories suitably enriched by their relevant phases and amplitudes provide a very good agreement with the direct numerical integration of the wave equation for integrable as well as for various billiard shapes, such as the Sina=EF and stadium billiards. In conclusion, this short review has shown a few examples where new interesting physics can spring out of analogies between different fields. I would like to thank warmly my collaborators C. Vanneste, O.Legrand, P. Sebbah, P. Mortessagne, D. Delande, R. Weaver, C. Schmit, O. Bohigas and S. de Toro Arias. REFERENCES [1] D.Sornette, "Acoustic waves in random media: I Weak disorder regime", Acustica 67, 199 (1989); "II Coherent effects and strong disorder regime", Acustica 67, 251 (1989); "III Experimental situations", Acustica 68, 15 (1989) [2] D.Sornette et B.Souillard, "A mean field approach to Anderson localization", Europhys.Lett. 13, 7-12 (1990) [3] J.P. Desidri and D. Sornette, "Band-edge localization and spatial textures of surface acoustic waves in weakly disordered 1D-superlattices, Europhys. Lett. 23, 165-170 (1993) [4] L.Macon, J.P. Desidri and D.Sornette, "Surface acoustic waves in a simple quasi-periodic system", Phys.Rev.B 40, 3605 (1989) [5] J.P. Desidri, L.Macon and D.Sornette, "First experimental observat ion of critical modes in quasi-periodic systems", Phys.Rev.Lett. 63, 390 (1989) [6] J.P. Desidri, O.Legrand, L.Macon and D.Sornette, "Cantor set spectra and self-similar critical modes in a 1D-quasicrystal", Physica D 38, 56 (1989) [7] L.Macon J.P. Desidri and D.Sornette, "Localisation of surface acoustic waves in quasi-periodic systems", Phys.Rev.B 44, 6755-6772 (1991) [8] C. Vanneste, P. Sebbah and D.Sornette, "A wave automaton for time-dependent wave propagation in random media", Europhys.Lett. 17, 715-720 (1992); 18, 567 (1992) (Erratum) [9] D.Sornette, O.Legrand, F.Mortessagne, P.Sebbah and C. Vanneste, "The wave automaton for the time-dependent Schrdinger, classical wave and Klein-Gordon equations", Phys.Lett.A 178, 292-300 (1993); C. Vanneste, P. Sebbah and D. Sornette, "General wave equations modelled by the Wave Automaton", Europhys.Letters 21 (7), 794 (1993); [10] S. De Toro Arias, D.Sornette and C.Vanneste, to be published [11] P. Sebbah, D. Sornette and C. Vanneste, "A Wave Automaton for wave propagation in the time domain : I. periodic systems", J.Phys. I France 3, 1259-1280 (1993) [12] P. Sebbah, D. Sornette and C. Vanneste, "A Wave Automaton for wave propagation in the time domain : II. random systems", J.Phys. I France 3, 1281-1302 (1993) [13] P.Sebbah, C.Vanneste and D.Sornette, "Anomalous diffusion in two-dimensional Anderson localization dynamics", Phys.Rev. B 48, 12506, 1 Nov (1993)-I [14] S.Feng and D.Sornette, "Acoustic nondestructive evaluation of heterogeneous materials in the multiple scattering regime", J.Acoust.Soc.Am. 90, 1742-1747 (1991) [15] C. Vanneste, S. Feng and D.Sornette, "Non-destructive Evaluations in multiple scattering media", Europhys. Lett. 24, 339-344 (1993) [16] D.Sornette, Distributed cavity laser by Anderson localiztaion in two dimensions, DRET grant N=B089/34271 (1989) [17] P. Sebbah, D. Sornette and C. Vanneste, "Wave automaton for wave propagation in random media", in Proceedings of "Photon migration in random media", Orlando, USA, march 1994; P. Sebbah, C. Vanneste and D. Sornette, "Numerical study of wave propagation in nonlinear disordered media : random distributed feedback tunable laser", In proceedings of the Workshop on Optical Telecommunications Fibres and Components for Systems Applications (COST), University of Nice, France, April 18-19 (1994) [18] D.Sornette, "High frequency vibrations and quantum chaos", DRET grant 89/543 (1989) [19] O. Legrand and D. Sornette, "Quantum chaos and classical waves", Lecture Notes in Physics 392, 267-274 (1991); D. Sornette, "Vibrations de plaques et chaos quantique", Revue Franaise de Mcanique, numero special 1991, p.364-381 (1991); "Vibrations hautes frequences des structures", Aux Frontires du Domaine, Acoustique et Vibrations, Science et Defence 92 (Dunod, Paris, 1992), p.185-205. [20] O. Bohigas, O.Legrand, C. Schmit and D.Sornette, "Comment on Spectral Statistics in Elastodynamics", J.Acoust.Soc.Am.89, 1456-1458 (1991); D. Delande, D. Sornette and R. Weaver, "A reanalysis of experimental high frequency spectra using periodic orbit theory", J.Acoust.Soc.Am. 96, nb03, 1873-1880 (1994). [21] O.Legrand, C.Schmit and D.Sornette, "High frequency plate vibrations and quantum chaos", Europhys.Lett. 18, nb02, 101-106 (1992) [22] D. Delande and D. Sornette, "Acoustic radiation from membranes at high frequencies : the quantum chaos regime", J.Acoust.Soc.Am. submitted [23] O.Legrand, F. Mortessagne and D. Sornette, "Spectral rigidity in the large modal overlap regime : beyond the Ericson-Schroeder hypothesis", J.Phys.I France 5 (to appear, August 1995) [24] C.Schmit and D.Sornette, "Properties of connected membranes using quantum chaos methods", Acta Acustica submitted [25] O.Legrand and D.Sornette, "Test of Sabine's reverberation time in ergodic auditorium within geometrical acoustics", J.Acoust.Soc.Am.88(2), 865 (1990); F. Mortessagne, O.Legrand and D.Sornette, "Role of the absorption distribution and generalization of exponential reverberation law in chaotic rooms", J.Acoust.Soc.Am.94, 154-161 (1993); "Renormalization of exponential decay rates by fluctuations of barrier encounters", Europhys.Lett. 20 (4), 287-293 (1992). [26] F. Mortessagne, O.Legrand and D.Sornette, "Transient chaos in room acoustics", Chaos 3, 529-541 (1993) [27] F. Mortessagne, O. Legrand and D. Sornette, "Geometric theory of wave dynamics in chaotic billiards", Europhys.Lett. submitted [28] O.Legrand and D.Sornette, "Fractal set of recurrent orbits in billiards", Europhys.Lett.11,583 (1990)

75. Air Conditioning Compressors Vibration Noise Data
1 KEYNOTE LECTURES Monday 5 July 1000 sir james lighthill and his contributionsto science Malcolm J. Crocker, Auburn University, Al, USA Michael james
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Section 5
... 4 Acoustics 5.5 Vibration 5.6 Deleted 5.7 ... design considerations subsection includes data on safe atmospheric compositions and pressures ... nitrogen, which comprises 78% of Earth's air by volume. Best candidate atmospheres will ... Curator: SF/Rebeka Burnett - rebeka.i.burnett1@jsc.nasa.gov
http://msis.jsc.nasa.gov/sections/section05.asp 7
[application/pdf] ... the twentieth century. His papers on jet noise theory written in the 1950s were the first ... has been partly overshadowed by his jet noise papers. In addition to his scientific achievements ... correlation with the annoyance from the jet noise. Dr Karl Kryter made a study of the influence ... 1 KEYNOTE LECTURES Monday 5 July 10:00 Sir James Lighthill and his contributions to science Malcolm J. Crocker, Auburn University, Al, USA Michael James Lighthill born in 1924 is considered by many of his contemporaries to be one of the greatest...
http://icsv6.dat.dtu.dk/programme/abstracts/abstracts.pdf 6

76. $B?^=q%j%9%H(B($BHs@~7ANO3XJ,Ln(B) $BHs@~7ANO3X(B $BN.BNNO3X(B
2001). sir. james lighthill FRS (19241998), funeral address by JulianHunt , Fluid Dynamics Research, vol.24, pp.iii-vi, (1999).
http://www.acs.i.kyoto-u.ac.jp/info/ndyn/book_funakoshi.html
$B4XO"J,Ln$N;29M?^=q$N>R2p$*$h$S=qI>(B ($BHs@~7ANO3XJ,Ln(B) $BHs@~7ANO3X!$N.BNNO3X(B
(new) <%?$O!$:G6a$KDI2C$"$k$$$O99?7$5$l$^$7$?!#(B $B%?%$%H%k(B $BCx ISBN $B=PHG An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics G.K. Batchelor Cambridge University Press Introduction to Theoretical and Computational Fluid Dynamics C. Pozrikidis Oxford University Press Physical Fluid Dynamics, 2nd ed. (new)
D.J. Tritton
$B!J>e!'(B4901092251$B!K(B
$B!J2 Oxford University Press
$B!J%$%s%G%C%/%9=PHG!K(B Waves in Fluids James Lighthill Cambridge University Press Wave Interactions and Fluid Flows Alex D. D. Craik Cambridge University Press The Mathematical Theory of Permanent Progressive Water-Waves H. Okamoto and M. Shoji World Scientific A Modern Introduction to the Mathematical Theory of Water Waves R. S. Johnson Cambridge University Press Vortex Dynamics P. G. Saffman Cambridge University Press The N-Vortex Problem Analytical Techniques P. K. Newton Springer-Verlag Environmental Stratified Flows Roger Grimshaw (ed.) Kluwer Academic Publishers Topographic Effects in Stratified Flows Peter G. Baines

77. James Lighthill
Collected Papers of sir james lighthill by james sir lighthill , M. Yousuff Hussaini, M. james lighthill. by J. lighthill , MJ lighthill , sir james lighthill.
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Waves in Fluids

This book is a kind of a book that is seldom used as a text in universities, but everybody in the fields of math, physics, and engineering, has once read. The most valuable topic in this book would be the theory of aeroacoustics which is developed by the auther. Everything is fundamental, but you can learn a great deal about waves which you cannot from other books. This book is a prerequisite to anyone who wants to talk about waves in fluids. more...
Written by James Lighthill
Published by Cambridge Univ Pr (Pap Txt) (January 2002) ISBN 0521010454 Price $38.00

78. Journal Clubs
15. Paul Dirac, 19321969 (37 years). 16. sir james lighthill, 1969-1980(11 years). 17. Stephen Hawking, 1980-2003+ ( 23 years). In
http://www.pitt.edu/~biohome/Dept/Frame/journalclubs.htm
Journal clubs provide interactive fora for informal discussion of current research. These groups include the following:
  • Microbiology Journal Club , meets weekly in 343 Crawford for discussion of current research in prokaryotic microbiology The Pittsburgh Area Yeast Meeting is held on the second Friday of every month at 3:30 pm at Carnegie Mellon University The Pittsburgh Chromatin Club meets monthly on Monday evenings. The Developmental Biology Journal Club meeting weekly. Ecology and Evolution Journal Club, which meets Wednesdays at 12 pm in 330 Clapp Hall Systematics Journal Club, meeting monthly Phine Phages of Phittsburgh, which meets bimonthly The Molecular Chaperone Journal Club meets every other Monday in the spring. Undergraduate Journal Club meets weekly RNA discussion group, meeting biweekly
In our continuing effort to widen our readers' knowledge base, here are Cambridge University's Lucasian Professors of Mathematics (funded by an endowment made by Henry Lucas in December 1663): Isaac Barrow 1664-1669 (5 years) Sir Isaac Newton 1669-1702 (33 years) William Whiston 1702-1710 (8 years) Nicolas Saunderson 1711-1739 (28 years) John Colson 1739-1760 (21 years) Edward Waring 1760-1798 (38 years) Isaac Milner 1798-1820 (23 years) Robert Woodhouse 1820-1822 (2 years) Thomas Turton 1822-1826 (4 years) Sir George Airy 1826-1828 (2 years) Charles Babbage 1828-1839 (12 years) Joshua King 1839-1849 (11 years) Sir George Stokes 1849-1903 (54 years) Sir Joseph Larmor 1903-1932 (30 years) Paul Dirac 1932-1969 (37 years)

79. About The State In Action: Public Policy And Politics: James Simmie Roger King -
james sir lighthill M. Yousuff Hussaini Collected Papers of sir jameslighthill. james sir lighthill M. Yousuff Hussaini- Collected
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Book review (s) - book summary- buy book online - book note - essay
Book by James Simmie Roger King- The State in Action: Public Policy and Politics
CLICK HERE - Written by James Simmie Roger King- The State in Action: Public Policy and Politics
Written by James Simmie Roger King- The State in Action: Public Policy and Politics
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James Simpson- Spanish Agriculture The Long Siesta 1765 - 1965 Cambridge Studies in Modern Economic History 2
Spanish Agriculture The Long Siesta 1765 - 1965 Cambridge Studies in Modern Economic History 2 !
James Sir Lighthill M. Yousuff Hussaini- Collected Papers of Sir James Lighthill
James Sir Lighthill M. Yousuff Hussaini- Collected Papers of Sir James Lighthill
James Sir Somerville- The Somerville Papers: Selections from the Private and Official Correspondence of Admiral of the Fleet Sir James Somerville, G.C.B.,G.B.E,D.S.O.
James Sir Somerville- The Somerville Papers: Selections from the Private and Official Correspondence of Admiral of the Fleet Sir James Somerville, G.C.B.,G.B.E,D.S.O.
Literature James Sire- Chris Chrisman Goes to College: And Faces the Challenges of Relativism, Individualism, and Pluralism
James Sire- Chris Chrisman Goes to College: And Faces the Challenges of Relativism, Individualism, and Pluralism

80. Chaos, Solitons & Fractals
Bondi, Cambridge, UK; B. Chirikov, Novosibirsk, Russia; M. Feigenbaum,NY, USA; sir james lighthill, London, UK; RM May, Oxford, UK;
http://www.ph.utexas.edu/~csf/editors.html
Editors
Honorary Editorial Board
  • S.Al Athel, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
  • J. Argyris, Stuttgart, Germany
  • Sir Hermann Bondi, Cambridge, UK
  • B. Chirikov, Novosibirsk, Russia
  • M. Feigenbaum, NY, USA
  • Sir James Lighthill, London, UK
  • R. M. May, Oxford, UK
  • S. E. Newhouse, NC, USA
  • Sir Brian Pippard, Cambridge, UK
  • I. Prigogine, Brussels, Belgium
  • I. Procaccia, Rehovot, Israel
  • Y. Ueda, Kyoto, Japan
  • J. Yorke, MD, USA
    Regional Editors
  • Australia
    C. Thomson,
    Department of Mathematics, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia
  • China
    Hao Bai-Lin,
    Institute of Theoretical Physics, Academia Sinica, P. O. Box 2735, Beijing 100080, P. R. China
  • Europe
    G. Nicolis,
    Department of Chemical Physics, Code Postale No. 231, Campus Plaine U. L. B., Boulevard du Triomphe, 1050 Bruxelles, Belgium
    I. Antoniou, International Solvay Institutes of Physics and Chemistry, Free University of Brussels, CP 231, Campus Plaine ULB, Bd du Triumphe, 1050 Brussels, Belgium
  • Japan
    Y. H. Ichikawa,
    College of Engineering, Chubu University, Kasugai-shi, Aichi 487, Japan
  • USA
    L. Reichl
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