- Robin Bullough
Robin K. Bullough (21 November 1929-30 August 2008cite web|url=http://www.ma.hw.ac.uk/solitons/|title=Solitons Home Page|accessdate=2008-09-16|first=Chris|last= Eilbeck|publisher= Department of Mathematics, Heriot-Watt University] ) was a British Mathematical Physicist famous for his contributions to the theory of
solitons , in particular for his role in the development of the theory of theoptical soliton , now commonly used, for example, in the theory of trans-oceanicoptical fibre communication theory, but first recognised in Bullough's work on ultra-short (nano- and femto-second) optical pulses. He is also known for deriving exact solutions to the nonlinear equations describing these solitons and for associated work onintegrable systems , infinite-dimensionalHamiltonian system s (both classical and quantum), and the statistical mechanics for these systems. Bullough has also contributed to nonlinear mathematical physics, includingBose-Einstein condensation inmagnetic trap s.Bullough obtained his first academic position in the Mathematics Department at
UMIST in 1960 and was appointed chair of Mathematical Physics in 1973 where he remained until his retirement in 1995. He was then an Emeritus Professor in the same department, which has now become the School of Mathematics in theUniversity of Manchester .Education and career
Bullough's father, William Bullough, was a teacher of German in
Newcastle-under-Lyme and was himself a graduate of theVictoria University of Manchester . His mother Edith (neé Norman) was also a teacher and both parents wereQuakers .Although universally known as Robin, he was actually christened Robert Keith Bullough. Both Robin and his elder brother Donald attended Newcastle High School (then a direct grant school). Donald went on to become a successful professor of medieval history [Julia Smith, Obituary Professor Donald Bullough, Medieval historian with a sideline in philately, The Independent, 6 July 2002, [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/professor-donald-bullough-647433.html] ] .
On leaving School at 16 Bullough obtained a scholarship to
Emmanuel College, Cambridge but had to doNational Service in theRAF in 1948 and 1949. Three days before his demobilisation he had an accident putting a rawl plug into a wall as piece of steel from a chisel flew into his left eye. He was practically blind in that eye from then on. He obtained a BA in Natural Sciences at Cambridge, specialising in Theoretical Physics for part II. He went on to obtain a PhD in Chemistry from theUniversity of Leeds in 1957.He then obtained a job as a Mathematical Physicist at the British
Rayon Research Association in Manchester between 1959 and 1960 before obtaining a post as lecturer at UMIST. Bullough travelled widely to facilitate collaboration, with regular visiting appointments and research visits toCopenhagen ,Jyväskylä ,Los Alamos , DTH Lyngby in Denmark, andBen Gurion University in Israel.He was promoted to Reader in 1967 and Professor of Mathematical Physics in 1973.
He organized many conferences over his career including the first National Quantum Electronics Conferences (QEP1) in Manchester in Sept. 1973 and at which he made a first report of 'optical solitons', this was the first of fifteen biennial meetings.
By 1973 his research group in UMIST had found solutions to the the sine-Gordon and the self-induced transparency (SIT) equations for their multi-soliton solutions and gone on to both introduce, and to solve the initial value problem for, the system they called the ‘Reduced Maxwell-Bloch (RMB) Equations’ [Gibbon J D, Caudrey P J, Bullough R K and Eilbeck J C, An N-Soliton Solution of a Nonlinear Optics Equation Derived by a General Inverse Method, Lett. al Nuovo Cimento 8, 1973, 775–779.] .
Bullough supervised 24 successful doctoral students and had some 33 post doctoral research associates and visiting fellows. He has an
Erdos number of 4.In 1999 he gave the specially invited 'Special Foundation Lecture' at the Fourteenth UK National Quantum Electronics & Photonics Conference (QEP14) [ R. K. Bullough, The optical solitons of QE1 are the BEC of QE14: has the quantum soliton arrived? Special Foundation Lecture: a personal view 14th National Quantum Electronics and Photonics Conference, Owens Park, University of Manchester, 8 September 1999, Journal of Modern Optics, vol. 47, Issue 11, p.2029-2065, DOI|10.1080/09500340008232455] held at the University of Manchester. The lecture was entitled "The optical soliton of QE1 is the BEC of QE14: has the quantum soliton arrived?" paid tribute to his 45 years work in this area. This work in theoretical quantum optics includes the discovery of the "optical soliton" as such around 1973. Only
Stephen Chu , Nobel Laureate 1997, was similarly honoured at this conference.
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