- Elliott Waters Montroll
Infobox Scientist
box_width = 300px
name = Elliot W. Montroll
image_size = 200px
caption = Elliott Waters Montroll (1916-1983)
birth_date =May 4 ,1916
birth_place =Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania ,USA
death_date =December 3 ,1983
death_place =Chevy Chase, Maryland ,USA
residence = flag|USA
citizenship =
nationality = flag|USA|name=American
ethnicity =
fields =Mathematician
workplaces =Yale University Cornell University Princeton University Kellex Corporation Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn Office of Naval Research Courant Institute University of MarylandThomas J. Watson Research Center Institute for Defense Analysis University of Rochester
alma_mater =University of Pittsburgh
doctoral_advisor =James Sturdevant Taylor
academic_advisors =
doctoral_students =Michael F. Shlesinger Paul Chessin
notable_students =
known_for = Traffic flow analysis
author_abbrev_bot =
author_abbrev_zoo =
influences =
influenced =
awards =Lanchester Prize (1959)
religion =
footnotes = He is the father ofJohn Montroll .Elliott Waters Montroll (
May 4 ,1916 inPittsburgh, Pennsylvania ,USA -December 3 ,1983 inChevy Chase, Maryland , USA) was an Americanscientist andmathematician .Education
Elliott Montroll was born on
May 4 ,1916 inPittsburgh ,Pennsylvania , and received his elementary and high school education at the Dormont Public Schools. In 1933 he entered theUniversity of Pittsburgh and in 1937 he received a BS degree inChemistry . From 1937 until 1939 he was a graduate assistant in the Mathematics Department of the University of Pittsburgh, and during the first semester of the school year 1939-1940 he carried out research in the Chemistry Department ofColumbia University . He was awarded a Ph.D in mathematics at the University of Pittsburgh in 1939, with a thesis "Some Notes and Applications of the Characteristic Value Theory of Integral Equations" in which he applied integral equations to the study of imperfect gases. A paper published jointly with Joseph E. Mayer in 1941 Statistical mechanics of imperfect gases also examined ideas developing out of his thesis.Career
Montroll had an exceptionally varied career: was a Sterling Research Fellow at
Yale University where his work on the Ising model of aferromagnet led him to solve certainMarkov chain problems. Following this he was a Research Associate atCornell University in 1941-42 where he began his studies of the problem of finding the frequency spectrum of elastic vibrations in crystal lattices. During 1942-43 Montroll was an instructor in physics atPrinceton University .In 1943 Montroll was appointed as Head of the Mathematics Research Group at the Kellex Corporation in New York, working on programs associated with the Manhattan Project. In 1944 he went to the
Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn , as adjunct professor of chemistry, then in 1946 he returned to the University of Pittsburgh as assistant, and then associate, professor of physics and mathematics. During this time he also served as head of the Physics Branch of theOffice of Naval Research from 1948 to 1950. In 1950 he was appointed as a research fellow at theCourant Institute in New York and finally, in 1951 he was appointed Research Professor in the Institute for Fluid Dynamics and Applied Mathematics at the University of MarylandHowever, in 1960, he took the post of Director of General Sciences at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York, and then in 1963 the position of Vice President for Research at the
Institute for Defense Analysis in Washington, D.C.In 1966 he returned to the academic world as "'Albert Einstein Professor of Physics," and the Director of the Institute for Fundamental Studies, at the
University of Rochester . After retirement, he accepted two further positions, one back at the University of Maryland and the other at theUniversity of California, Irvine Honors
He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences (United States) in 1969, and to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1973. His work on traffic flow led to him winning (jointly) the Lanchester Prize of the Operations Research Society of America in 1959.
Personal life
He was the father of ten including
John Montroll .References
*C. W. Carey Jr, Elliott Waters Montroll, American National Biography 15 (Oxford, 1999), 717-718.
*Elliott W. Montroll: List of publications, in "The Wonderful World of Stochastics" (North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1985), 17-27.
*D. C. Gazis and R. Herman, "In memory of Elliott W. Montroll," "Transportation Sci." 18(2) (1984), 99-100.
*Obituary: Elliott Waters Montroll, "New York Times" (8 December, 1983).
*M. F. Shlesinger and G. H. Weiss, Elliott Waters Montroll (May 4, 1916 - December 3, 1983), in The Wonderful World of Stochastics (North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1985), 1-16.
*M. F. Shlesinger and B. J. West, Elliott W. Montroll (1916 - 1983): in memoriam, in "Random Walks and Their Applications in the Physical and Biological Sciences," Washington, D.C., 1982 (Amer. Inst. Phys., New York, 1 984), vi-viii.
*G. H. Weiss, Elliott Waters Montroll, National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoirs 63 (1994), 365-380.External links
* [http://www-groups.dcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/~history/Biographies/Montroll.html Biography of Elliott Montroll]
* [http://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=42952 Montroll's math genealogy]
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