Forman Arthur Williams ( born Forman Arthur Williams , born January 12, 1934) is an American physicist-scientist, a specialist in the field of combustion.
| Forman Arthur Williams | |
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| supervisor | S.S. Penner |
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Biography
He received a bachelor's degree from Princeton University in 1955, a Ph.D. from Caltech under the leadership of Saul Penner in 1958, in the dissertation council of Richard Feynman . He presented his PhD thesis personally to von Karman in his house. Karman had a strong influence on Williams.
After graduation, he worked in the Department of Engineering and Applied Physics at Harvard University until 1964, after which he entered the UCSD faculty. He was the fourth lecturer appointed when Saul Penner founded the Faculty of Engineering at the University of California at San Diego. In January 1981, he accepted the Robert H. Goddard Chair at Princeton, and finally returned to UCSD in 1988. Williams also worked as an adjunct professor at Yale University for one month of each year for ten years in a row since 1997. He was also director of the Center for Energy Studies from 1991 to 2006 at UCSD. For four years he served as a chair in UCSD.
Research Interests
Fundamental results in the field of combustion, including microgravity. It is considered one of the prominent scientists in the field of combustion. He obtained the sputtering equation (1958), as a statistical model for burning combustion, similar to the Boltzmann equation. Although the activation of the activation energy was known to Russian scientists earlier, it was Williams who suggested using analysis in 1971. In 1985, he proposed a mathematical model for a pre-mixed turbulent flame.
He worked on a number of projects with NASA, the Air Force and other organizations, and was part of the ISS mission at the FLEX (Flame Extinguishment Experiment) and FLEX-2. Conducted an experimental study of spiral flames in the circulation flow of the Pocket, the flame of ethanol, etc.
Bibliography
F. Williams. Combustion Theory. M .: Nauka, 1971. 615 p. [one]