Elias Gyftopoulos

Elias Panayiotis Gyftopoulos (Greek: Ηλίας Παναγιώτης Γυφτόπουλος; July 4, 1927  June 23, 2012) was a Greek-American engineer who contributed to thermodynamics both in its general formulation and its quantum foundations.[1]

Elias Gyftopoulos
Born(1927-07-04)4 July 1927
Died23 June 2012(2012-06-23) (aged 84)
Lincoln, Massachusetts, United States
Citizenship
  • Greece
  • United States (from 1963)
Alma mater
Scientific career
FieldsThermodynamics
Energetics
Physics
InstitutionsMassachusetts Institute of Technology

Gyftopoulos received an undergraduate degree in mechanical and electrical engineering in 1953 from the National Technical University of Athens, and a Doctor of Science degree in electrical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1958. At MIT, he initially focused on nuclear reactor safety and control. After meeting professors George N. Hatsopoulos and Joseph H. Keenan,[2] his interests moved towards thermodynamics, in an attempt to give a consistent and rigorous exposition, free of the logical flaws and the limitations commonly associated with this discipline: the result was a non-statistical theory, applicable to both macroscopic and microscopic systems, both in equilibrium and in non-equilibrium.[3] His research culminated in the effort to give a quantum basis to thermodynamics with a physical theory unifying mechanics and Thermodynamics.[4]

Works

  • Gyftopoulos, E. P.; Beretta, G. P. (2005) [1st ed., Macmillan, 1991]. Thermodynamics: Foundations and Applications. Mineola (New York): Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0486479255.
gollark: The air doesn't move, so you're fixed in place (by air), but also can't breathe any.
gollark: If you stop time for everything but you, you can't actually do anything and rapidly suffocate or something.
gollark: It's not well-defined. If you literally "stop time", it can never start again.
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References

  1. Professor emeritus Elias P. Gyftopoulos dies at 84 at Massachusetts Institute of Technology; by Alissa Mallinson and Ilavenil Subbiah; published June 27, 2012; retrieved May 21, 2013
  2. Hatsopoulos, G. N.; Keenan, J. H. (1982) [1st ed., Wiley, 1965]. Principles of General Thermodynamics. Krieger. ISBN 978-0898743036.
  3. Gyftopoulos & Beretta 2005.
  4. See, e.g.: http://www.quantumthermodynamics.org Archived 2010-05-29 at the Wayback Machine
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