Howard Wilson Emmons

Howard Wilson Emmons (1912–1998) was an American professor in the department of Mechanical Engineering at Harvard University.[1] During his career he conducted original research on fluid mechanics, combustion and fire safety. Today he is most widely known for his pioneering work in the field of fire safety engineering. He has been called "the father of modern fire science" for his contribution to the understanding of flame propagation and fire dynamics.[2] He also helped design the first supersonic wind tunnel, identified a signature of the transition to turbulence in boundary layer flows (now known as "Emmons spots"), and was the first to observe compressor stall in a gas turbine compressor (still a major item of research today).[3] He initiated studies on diffusion flames inside a boundary layer, and Emmons problem is named after him. He was eventually awarded the Timoshenko Medal by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and the 1968 Sir Alfred Egerton Gold Medal from The Combustion Institute.

Howard Wilson Emmons
Born(1912-08-30)August 30, 1912
DiedNovember 20, 1998(1998-11-20) (aged 86)
Alma materStevens Institute of Technology
Harvard University
Known forEmmons problem
Scientific career
FieldsFluid dynamics
Combustion
InstitutionsWestinghouse Electric Company
University of Pennsylvania
Harvard University
ThesisThe drop condensation of vapors (1938)
Doctoral advisorJohn Finnie Downie Smith
Charles Harold Berry
Doctoral studentsRichard Ernest Kronauer
Tony Maxworthy

Upon Professor Emmons' death, Professor Patrick Pagni wrote, "It is not possible to properly summarize the magnitude of Professor Emmons' unique contributions to the establishment of fire safety science as a discipline, other than to call him "Mr. Fire Research".[4]

He continues to be remembered through the Emmons Lecture at International Symposium of The International Association for Fire Safety Science and the Howard W. Emmons Distinguished Scholar Endowment at Worcester Polytechnic Institute.

Biography

Awards and honors

Selected publications

Sole Author

The Drop Condensation of Vapors
Harvard University Thesis (S.D.), 1938.

Gas dynamics tables for air
Dover: New York, NY, 1947.

Fundamentals of Gas Dynamics
Princeton University Press: Princeton NJ, 1958.

Fluid mechanics and combustion
Proceedings of the 13th International Symposium on Combustion, p. 1-18 Pittsburgh, Pa., Combustion Institute, 1971.

“The Further History of Fire Science” Combustion Science and Technology, 40, 1984 (reprinted in Fire Technology, 21(3), 1985 )

Joint

Thermodynamic properties of helium to 50.000°K
by Wilbert James Lick, Howard Wilson Emmons Harvard University Press: Cambridge, MA, 1962.

Transport properties of helium from 200 to 50.000°K
by Wilbert James Lick, Howard Wilson Emmons Harvard University Press: Cambridge, MA, 1965.

The fire whirl
by Howard W. Emmons and Shuh-Jing Ying Proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on Combustion, p. 475-486 Pittsburgh, Pa., Combustion Institute, 1967.

gollark: That's kind of what the correction asterisk means but that would be valid too.
gollark: The `*` represents a correction, i.e. "this is wrong so substitute this in where the incorrect bit is".
gollark: Oh, I see. That's not a sentence.
gollark: What are you talking about then?
gollark: "It's" there would make it "you're making my keyboard lose it is confidence". Which is probably wrong.

See also

Notes

  1. Land and Trefethen, 1999
  2. Beyler, 1999
  3. Kronauer et al., 2007
  4. Bryner 2000, p.425-427.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.