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         Stewartson Keith:     more detail
  1. High-Speed Computing in Fluid Dynamics by Francois N. And Keith Stewartson (editors) Frenkiel, 1969
  2. The boundary layer by Keith Stewartson, 1965
  3. The theory of laminar boundary layers in compressible fluids (Oxford mathematical monographs) by Keith Stewartson, 1964
  4. The boundary layer: An inaugural lecture delivered at University College, London, 1 March 1965 (University College, London. Inaugural lectures) by Keith Stewartson, 1966
  5. THE THEORY OF LAMINAR BOUNDARY LAYERS IN COMPRESSIBLE FLUIDS (OXFORD MATHEMATICAL MONOGRAPHS) by KEITH STEWARTSON, 1964-01-01
  6. The boundary layer, by Keith Stewartson, 1966

1. Keith Stewartson - Storming Media
Pentagon reports and documents by Keith Stewartson
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

2. Stewartson Portrait
Portrait of Keith Stewartson
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

3. The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Keith Stewartson
Keith Stewartson Biography. Ph.D. University of Cambridge 1949. UnitedKingdom.Dissertation Advisor Peter Slodowy No students known.
http://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/id.phtml?id=84426

4. References For Stewartson
References for the biography of Keith Stewartson
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

5. Stewartson (1964) The Theory Of Laminar Boundary Layers In
Post a Comment. CONTRIBUTORS Author Stewartson, Keith. PUBLISHER Clarendon Press (Oxford) SERIES TITLE YEAR 1964
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6. Entry Stewartson1981DP From Siamreview.bib
@Article{Stewartson1981DP, author = "Keith Stewartson", title = "{d'Alembert}'s paradox", journal = jSIAM-REVIEW, volume = "23", number = "3
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

7. Biography Of Stewartson, Keith
Biography of Stewartson, Keith
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

8. Studies Of Three-Dimensional Boundary Layers On Bodies Of
III. Cones at Incidence in Supersonic Flow. Authors Tuncer Cebeci; K. Kaups; A. A. Khattab; Keith Stewartson; DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT CO LONG BEACH
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

9. Full Alphabetical Index
List of mathematical biographies indexed alphabetically
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

10. Lebensdaten Von Mathematikern
Lebensdaten ber hmter Mathematikerinnen und Mathematiker
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

11. Neue Seite 1
de Boislaurent, Ferdinand Francois Desire Budan (28.9.1761 6.10.1840)
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12. Stewartson
Biography of keith stewartson (19251983) keith stewartson s father Georgewas a master baker in Billingham, County Durham, and it was in this town that
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Stewartson.html
Keith Stewartson
Born: 20 Sept 1925 in Barnsley, Yorkshire, England
Died: 7 May 1983 in London, England
Click the picture above
to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Version for printing
Keith Stewartson 's father George was a master baker in Billingham, County Durham, and it was in this town that Keith was brought up. He was the youngest of his parents' three children, having one older brother Roy and a sister who died while Keith was too young to remember her. He did not get off to the most promising start in terms of his education, for at the age of eleven he failed the examinations at the end of his primary schooling. Put on a reserve list for entry to Stockton Secondary School, he was fortunate to be selected despite having failed the examinations. At Stockton Secondary School he performed brilliantly but World War II started before he had completed his school education. His outstanding performance was rewarded with the award of a State Scholarship and a Kitchener Memorial Scholarship to Catharine's College, Cambridge, where his brother Roy had taken an engineering degree. Soon after this their family home suffered a direct hit during a bombing raid, but they had been given sufficient warning to seek protection in their air-raid shelter which was strong enough to let all the family survive, if somewhat shaken by their experiences. Stewartson was an undergraduate at St Catharine's College, entering in 1942, but by that time special regulations for the Mathematical Tripos had been introduced because of the War. As a result Stewartson completed Part II of the Tripos in two years, receiving the Drury Prize for his outstanding work. It was in 1943 that Stewartson had attended a lecture given at Cambridge by

13. References For Stewartson
References for the biography of keith stewartson. J Lighthill, keith stewartson,Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society of London 31
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Stewartson.html
References for Keith Stewartson
Version for printing
  • Obituary in The Times available on the Web Articles:
  • S N Brown, Obituary: Professor Keith Stewartson, J. Math. Phys. Sci. (3) (1983), i-ii.
  • S N Brown, Keith Stewartson (1925-1983). Founder editora tribute, J. Math. Phys. Sci. (6) (1984), i-xv.
  • J Lighthill, Keith Stewartson, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society of London
  • J Lighthill, Obituary: Professor Keith Stewartson, Bull. Inst. Math. Appl.
  • Obituary: Keith Stewartson, Quart. J. Mech. Appl. Math. (3) (1983), i.
  • N Riley, Keith Stewartson, Bull. London Math. Soc.
  • J T Stuart, Keith Stewartson (1925-1983): his life and work, Annual review of fluid mechanics Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
    History Topics
    ... Anniversaries for the year
    JOC/EFR October 2003 School of Mathematics and Statistics
    University of St Andrews, Scotland
    The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/References/Stewartson.html
  • 14. The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Update Data For Keith Stewartson
    If you have Mathematics Subject Classifications to submit for an entire group ofindividuals (for instance all those that worked under a particular advisor)
    http://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/php/submit-update.php?id=84426

    15. Boundary Layer Separation
    Brief biography of keith stewartson, FRS (19251982) van Dommelen s history ofthe discovery of `unsteady boundary layer separation .
    http://cis.jhu.edu/~tilak/blsep.html
    Boundary layer separation
    Flow separation is a phenomenon of widespread interest in boundary layer theory and its understanding was advanced considerably by Stewartson and Williams (1969) who showed that regular separation could occur by an interactive process; see also Neiland (1969) and Messiter (1970) . Since then, triple deck theory has contributed much to the understanding of boundary layer separation. Excellent reviews may be found in Stewartson (1981) Messiter (1983) and Smith (1986) . Finally, Sychev et al. is the translation of the first textbook ( Sychev, 1990 ) on this fascinating subject. Two book chapters have been written by Rothmayer and Smith (1998) . More recently, an introductory book on interactive boundary layer theory has been written by Ian Sobey (2000) Thermal boundary layer separation There are many examples of fluid flows in technology and engineering where imposed boundary conditions or geometries results in flow separation. In applications where thermal effects are significant, such as cooling or insulating systems, such separations can have important consequences for the heat transfer properties of the system. Currently we are considering the manner in which a thermal jet flow, such as that driven by buoyancy along a heated vertical wall, can separate resulting in a drastic reduction in heat transfer through the wall. Such separations may be relevant, for example, where the jet encounters a corner, obstruction or sudden change in thermal boundary conditions.

    16. Ratnanather: Research Interests
    At UCL, I drew inspiration from the fluid dynamics group led by keith stewartson.It was a privilege to have been lectured by this giant in applied
    http://cis.jhu.edu/~tilak/resbio.html
    Research biography The glorious fluidity of fluids Sir James Lighthill Although I am deaf and cannot therefore appreciate poetry in the same way as a hearing person this quotation has a "ring" to it. This quote appeared in a fluid dynamics textbook used in my undergraduate studies in mathematics at University College London (UCL) from 1982 to 1985. At UCL, I drew inspiration from the fluid dynamics group led by Keith Stewartson . It was a privilege to have been lectured by this giant in applied mathematics. By the end of my first year I was drawn towards fluid dynamics especially the rich mathematical theory of "triple decks" that Stewartson pioneered. However, I did not proceed to research in this field because I was offered a stipend by Bill Morton of Numerical Analysis Group at the University of Oxford. From 1985 to 1989, I was exposed to a wider range of applied mathematics. Under the joint supervision of Bill Morton and the late John Rollett , using perturbation methods I analyzed ad hoc techniques used in computational fluid dynamics (CFD) codes to model turbulent flows. Since then I have been interested in the numerical solution of coupled partial differential equations arising in transport phenomena. From 1989 to 1991, I did my first postdoctoral research with

    17. SIREV Volume 23
    pages 292 307; D’Alembert’s Paradox keith stewartson pages 308 - 343; A Surveyof Degree of Approximation of Continuous Functions A. Holland
    http://locus.siam.org/SIREV/vol_23_iss_3.html
    SIAM's Online Journal Archive
    SEEK EXPLORE LOCATE SIREV advanced search By using LOCUS you agree to abide by the
    Terms and Conditions of Use
    SIREV Volume 23 Issue 3
    Walsh Spectral Analysis
    Pedro Morettin
    pages 279 - 291
    Some Examples of Optimal Stochastic Controls OR: The Stochastic Maximum Principle at Work
    U. Haussmann
    pages 292 - 307 Keith Stewartson
    pages 308 - 343
    A Survey of Degree of Approximation of Continuous Functions
    A. Holland
    pages 344 - 379
    Announcement

    pages 380 - 380
    Inflation Mathematics for Professionals
    Edward Herold
    pages 381 - 384
    The Best Time to Die
    Margaret Maxfield, Naomi McCarty
    pages 385 - 389
    A Set of Linearly Independent Polynomials
    P. Smith
    pages 390 - 390
    Zeros of a Polynomial
    S. Riemenschneider, A. Sharma, P. Smith
    pages 390 - 390
    Distinct Zeros of a Function
    K. Schrader pages 391 - 391
    Estimation of the Median Effective Dose in Bioassay
    D. Raeside pages 391 - 391
    Positivity of the Coefficients of a Polynomial
    Ko-Wei Lih, E. Wang pages 391 - 391
    Power Series of an Elliptic Function
    M. Glasser

    18. SIAP Volume 36
    pages 177 189; On the Response of a Stagnation Boundary Layer to a Change inthe External Velocity Tuncer Cebeci, keith stewartson, Peter Williams
    http://locus.siam.org/SIAP/vol_36_iss_2.html
    SIAM's Online Journal Archive
    SEEK EXPLORE LOCATE SIAP advanced search By using LOCUS you agree to abide by the
    Terms and Conditions of Use
    SIAP Volume 36 Issue 2
    A Separator Theorem for Planar Graphs
    Richard Lipton, Robert Tarjan
    pages 177 - 189
    On the Response of a Stagnation Boundary Layer to a Change in the External Velocity
    Tuncer Cebeci, Keith Stewartson, Peter Williams
    pages 190 - 199
    Asymptotic Behavior of the Solution of the Integral Transport Equation in the Vicinity of a Curved Material Interface

    pages 200 - 218
    Mathematical Analysis of a Cellular Control Process with Positive Feedback
    James Selgrade
    pages 219 - 229
    Neutron Transport in Moving Media
    H. Wilson, W. Scott, Jr., G Pomraning
    pages 230 - 262
    On the Tracing of Light Rays through Deformed Glass Rods with Radially Graded Refractive Indices
    Gregory Kriegsmann, Michael Williams
    pages 263 - 272
    Some Properties and Applications of the Differences of the Generalized Factorials
    Ch. Charalambides
    pages 273 - 280
    Conditions for Global Stability Concerning a Prey-Predator Model with Delay Effects
    Anthony Leung
    pages 281 - 286
    Two Queues with Alternating Service
    Martin Eisenberg
    pages 287 - 303
    Distribution of a Ratio of Correlated Gamma Random Variables
    Ru-Ying Lee, Burt Holland, John Flueck

    19. LIMS > Sir James Lighthill
    Professor keith stewartson and Frank Smith s pioneering work at University Collegeanalysing flows over the surface of aircraft wings using a three layer
    http://www.ucl.ac.uk/lims/lighthill.htm
    De Morgan House
    57-58 Russell Square
    London WC1B 4HS
    Tel: 020 7863 0881
    Email: office@lims.ucl.ac.uk
    Sir James Lighthill
    He was born in Paris in 1924. His father, whose family had come from Alsace in the 1860s, was an engineer with an international outlook that James inherited in abundance. From preparatory school at Boxgrove he won a highly competitive scholarship to Winchester College. This seems to have a permanently unsettling effect on many Wykehamists. But James did better than most in following William of Wykeham's motto 'Manners makyth man'! He was always a polite and gracious man. There were only a few occasions when the mathematics at a seminar was so awful that he had to leave or had to remonstrate rather forcibly. Although he won a mathematical scholarship to Trinity College Cambridge at the age of 15, he broadened his education and went up in 1941 aged 17 - together with his mathematical school friend Freeman Dyson. They shared the distinction later on of both becoming honorary Fellows of Trinity. James was amongst the Wranglers when he completed the Maths Tripos two years later; he took only pure maths papers, because he said these could be most useful in his planned career in applied mathematics. It was remarkable that 40 years ago, he could see that these transformations could lead to analysis and hand-calculations. Nowadays they form the basis for the computation of almost any kind of flow. He then showed how approximations to the exact equations for' the different parts of the flow, say near the fish or far away was the next step in the analytical simplification of the flow calculations. Professor Keith Stewartson and Frank Smith's pioneering work at University College analysing flows over the surface of aircraft wings using a three layer sandwich approach owes much to James' work.

    20. ROTATING FLUIDS MEETING
    of rotating fluids and was organised by keith stewartson, Andrew Soward,Raymond Hide, David Acheson, Leslie Hocking amongst others.
    http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~ucahnrm/rot.html
    The Dynamics of Rotating Fluids
    The Department of Mathematics at UCL hosts a yearly meeting on the theme of the dynamics of rotating fluids. The meeting is usually held in early January on a Friday afternoon. Talks begin at at about 1.00 going through to about 5.00 and are held in Room 500 of the Mathematics Department. Talks are welcomed on any subject to do with rotating fluids and its applications (e.g. experimental data, meteorology, oceanography, astrophysical fluid dynamics, MHD, planetary atmospheres and interiors, existence and uniqueness proofs etc, etc., etc...) Talks of any length (e.g from 10-40 minutes) can be accommodated. The next meeting will be on January 7, 2005. The programme is
    1.00pm Paul Williams (Reading) `Generation and impact of inertia-gravity waves'
    1.20pm Roger Grimshaw (Loughborough) `The effect of rotation on shock formation: the dispersionless Ostrovsky equation'
    1.40pm Paul Dellar (Imperial) `Trapped equatorial waves in the "revolutionary" shallow water equations'
    2.00pm Ziv Kizner (Bar-Ilan) `Two-dimensional multipoles: Controlled laboratory experiments and explicit solutions'

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