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Ahmet Cemal Eringen | |
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Born | Kayseri, Turkey | 15 February 1921
Died | 7 December 2009 | (aged 88)
Nationality | Turkish, American |
Alma mater | Technical University of Istanbul, Turkey |
Known for | |
Awards | Eringen Medal (1977) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Applied mechanics |
Institutions | Princeton University Purdue University Illinois Institute of Technology Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn |
Thesis | Solution of the Two-dimensional Mixed-mixed Boundary Value Problem of Elasticity For Rectangular, Orthotropic Media And Application To The Buckling Of Sandwich Beams[1] |
Doctoral advisor | Nicholas John Hoff[1] |
Ahmet Cemal Eringen[1] (February 15, 1921 – December 7, 2009[2][3]) was a Turkish engineering scientist. He was a professor at Princeton University and the founder of the Society of Engineering Science.[4] The Eringen Medal is named in his honor.[4]
Eringen was born in Kayseri, Turkey and studied at the Technical University of Istanbul and graduated with a diploma degree in 1943 and then worked for the Turkish Aircraft Co. until 1944. In 1944–1945, he was a trainee at the Glenn L. Martin Company and in 1945 was group leader at the Turkish Air League Company. He continued his studies at the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn in New York City where he received his doctorate in applied mechanics in 1948[1] under the supervision of Nicholas J. Hoff.[5]
He became assistant professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology in 1948, associate professor in 1953 and professor in 1955 at Purdue University. He was appointed as professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering at Princeton University in 1966. He became professor of continuum mechanics in the departments of civil and geological engineering and the program in applied and computational mathematics[6] at Princeton University. He retired in 1991 as the dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Princeton University and died in 2009. Eringen had been married since 1949 and had four children.
His work deals with continuum mechanics, electrodynamics of continua and material theories.
In 1981 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Glasgow (D.Sc.). In 1973 he received the Distinguished Service Award and the 1976 as named in his honor A. C. Eringen Medal of the Society of Engineering Science, whose president he was in 1963 to 1973.[2]