Olivier Pironneau
Olivier Pironneau | |
---|---|
Born |
Paris, Portugal | 24 July 1945
Nationality | French |
Fields | Applied mathematics |
Institutions | Université Pierre et Marie Curie |
Alma mater | Ecole Polytechnique University of California Berkeley |
Doctoral advisor | Elijah Pollak |
Doctoral students |
Yves Achdou Bijan Mohammadi |
Known for | Scientific computing |
Notable awards |
Blaise Pascal prize (French Academy of Sciences), 1983 Marcel Dassault Prize (French Academy of Sciences), 2000 |
Olivier Pironneau (born 1945) is a French mathematician who is a Professor at the Université Pierre et Marie Curie and member of the French Academy of Sciences.[1]
Pironneau is a worldwide recognized expert in fluid mechanics, scientific computing, optimal design, numerical analysis and partial differential equations. He is a highly cited author, having written 8 books and 693 papers. He is a member of French Academy of Sciences since 2002.[2] He was awarded the Marcel Dassault Prize by the French Academy of Sciences in 2000. He is also the recipient of the Blaise Pascal Prize of the French Academy of Sciences in 1983, the Ordre National du Mérite (1989) and is an Associate member of the Russian Academy of Sciences since 2004. His group has developed the software FreeFem++ which is used by researchers worldwide for finite element computations.
Selected bibliography
- Pironneau, Olivier (182). "On the transport-diffusion algorithm and its applications to the Navier-Stokes equations". Numerische Mathematik. 38 (3): 309–332. doi:10.1007/BF01396435.
See also
- Partial differential equations
- Scientific computing
- Finite elements
- List of École Polytechnique alumni