Edriss Titi

Edriss Saleh Titi (Arabic: إدريس صالح تيتي, Hebrew: אדריס סאלח תיתי; born 22 March 1957 in Acre, Israel) is an Arab-Israeli mathematician. He is Professor of Nonlinear Mathematical Science[2] at the University of Cambridge. He also holds the Arthur Owen Professorship of Mathematics at Texas A&M University, and serves as Professor of Computer Science and Applied Mathematics at the Weizmann Institute of Science and Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Irvine.[3]

Edriss Titi
Born (1957-03-22) March 22, 1957
CitizenshipIsrael, United States
AwardsHumboldt Research Award (2009)[1]
Guggenheim Fellowship (2018)
Scientific career
FieldsNonlinear partial differential equations, fluid dynamics
Doctoral advisorCiprian Foias

Selected works

  • Cao, Chongsheng; Titi, Edriss S. (2007). "Global well-posedness of the three-dimensional viscous primitive equations of large scale ocean and atmosphere dynamics". Annals of Mathematics. Princeton University Press: 245–267. arXiv:math/0503028.
  • Foias, Ciprian; Holm, Darryl D.; Titi, Edriss S. (2002). "The three dimensional viscous Camassa–Holm equations, and their relation to the Navier–Stokes equations and turbulence theory". Journal of Dynamics and Differential Equations. 14 (14): 1–35. arXiv:nlin/0103039. doi:10.1023/A:1012984210582.
  • Foias, Ciprian; Holm, Darryl D.; Titi, Edriss S. (2001). "The Navier–Stokes-alpha model of fluid turbulence". Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena. North-Holland. 152: 505–519. arXiv:nlin/0103037. doi:10.1016/S0167-2789(01)00191-9.
  • Titi, Edriss S. (1990). "On approximate inertial manifolds to the Navier-Stokes equations". Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications. Academic Press. 149 (2): 540–557. doi:10.1016/0022-247X(90)90061-J.
gollark: What if Intel and AMD come up with "AVX but more so"™?
gollark: For representing data like this within the program or serializing it in a way nothing else has to read, it seems reasonable.
gollark: Hey, I'm not saying the u16 is the wrong choice here, just that it also isn't really always right.
gollark: CBOR and whatnot are nicer than using custom binary formats if you plan to swap data between systems a lot, because you can add new fields without breaking things and there's parsers for basically every languæge.
gollark: (yes, this is impossible, but oh well)

References

  1. Hutchins, Shana (23 May 2018). "Texas A&M Mathematician Edriss Titi Named 2018 Guggenheim Foundation Fellow". Texas A&M.
  2. "Elections, appointments, and grants of title". Cambridge University Reporter. 2019. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  3. "Edriss S. Titi". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. 2018. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
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