Arthur Leissa

Arthur W. Leissa is an American scientist specializing in the vibrations and dynamics of continuous systems fields.

Education

Arthur Leissa went to the Ohio State University as an undergraduate, earning bachelor's and master's degrees in mechanical engineering in 1954. He worked for a year in industry before returning to Ohio State for doctoral studies. He completed his Ph.D. in 1958, and remained at Ohio State as a faculty member. At the time of his promotion to full professor in 1964, he was the youngest full professor at the university.[1]

Leissa became president of the American Academy of Mechanics for 1987–88. He was elected as a Fellow of ASME in 1983. He was editor-in-chief of Applied Mechanics Reviews from 1993[1] to 2008.

Selected publications

  • Vibration of Plates, NASA, 1969
  • Vibration of Shells, NASA, 1973
  • "The free vibration of rectangular plates", Journal of Sound and Vibration, 31 (3): 257–293, December 1973, doi:10.1016/s0022-460x(73)80371-2
gollark: No, but it's nice to be able to refer to "Protagonism Street" and have there be no ambiguity.
gollark: ./warp choruscity
gollark: Which we probably do have right now, actually. There are something like... three cities. Cherryville is tiny, Chorus City uses weird names picked by me, and Switch City, well, has roads.
gollark: But I mean globally unique street names in Switchcraft.
gollark: Yes, the openstreetmaps page says so.

References

  1. Noor, A. K. (June 2003), "Arthur Leissa—a biographical sketch", Journal of Sound and Vibration, 263 (5): 963–964, doi:10.1016/s0022-460x(03)00267-0
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