Oscar Buneman

Oscar Buneman (28 September 1913 – 24 January 1993) made advances in science, engineering, and mathematics. Buneman was a pioneer of computational plasma physics and plasma simulation.[2][4]

Oscar Buneman
Born(1913-09-28)28 September 1913
Died24 January 1993(1993-01-24) (aged 79)
Alma materUniversity of Manchester[1]
ChildrenPeter Buneman
Scientific career
InstitutionsStanford University[2]
Doctoral advisorDouglas Hartree[1]
Doctoral studentsJohn Holdren[3]

Career

In 1940 upon completion of his PhD with Douglas Hartree,[1] Buneman joined Hartree's magnetron research group assisting the development of radar during World War II. They discovered the Buneman–Hartree criterion for the voltage threshold of a magnetron operation. After the war, Buneman developed theories and simulations of collision-less dissipation of currents[5] called the Buneman instability. This is an example of anomalous resistivity or absorption. It is anomalous because the phenomenon does not depend on collisions. Buneman advanced elliptic equation solver methods and their associated applications (as well as for the fast Fourier transforms).

Personal life

On 24 January 1993 Oscar Buneman at the age of 79 died near Stanford University. The computer scientist Peter Buneman is his son.

Publications

  • Buneman, O., "Time reversible difference procedures". Journal of Computers Physics. 1, 517 (1967).
  • Buneman, O., "A compact non-iterative poisson-solver". SUIPR report 294, Stanford University (1969).
  • Buneman, O., "Fast numerical procedures for computer experiments on relativistic plasmas, in "Relativistic Plasmas (The Coral Gables Conference)", Benjamin, NY, 1968.
  • Buneman, O. (1973). "Subgrid resolution of flow and force fields". Journal of Computational Physics. 11 (2): 250–268. doi:10.1016/0021-9991(73)90006-5.
  • Buneman, O., and et al., "Principles and capabilities of 3d EM particle simulations". Journal of Computational Physics. 38, 1 (1980).
gollark: Or even just "initialization parser".
gollark: Why not the "apiocore"?
gollark: This is for purposes.
gollark: I prefer the blue one.
gollark: Apio forms!

References

  1. Oscar Buneman at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. Buneman, R.; Barker, R. J.; Peratt, A. L.; Brecht, S. H.; Langdon, A. B.; Lewis, H. R. (1994). "A tribute to Oscar Buneman - pioneer of plasma simulation". IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science. 22: 22. doi:10.1109/27.281546.
  3. Holdren, John Paul (1970). Collisionless Stability of an Inhomogeneous, Confied, Planar Plasma (PhD thesis). Stanford University. ProQuest 302557782.
  4. Oscar Buneman's publications indexed by the Scopus bibliographic database. (subscription required)
  5. Buneman, O. (1959). "Dissipation of Currents in Ionized Media". Physical Review. 115 (3): 503–517. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.115.503.
  • Langdon, Bruce, "Remembrances of Oscar Buneman". ICNSP'98.
  • Oscar Buneman Papers
  • Rita Meyer-Spasche/Rolf Tomas Nossum: Persecution and Patronage: Oscar Buneman's years in Britain. In: Almagest, International Journal for the History of Scientific Ideas, Vol. 7, Issue 2, 2016
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