
24 May 2006
2006 Prince Philip Medal awarded
to Finite Element Method pioneer
The Royal Academy of Engineering
is to confer its solid gold Prince Philip Medal to Professor
Olek Zienkiewicz CBE FREng FRS, widely regarded as the "Father of the Finite Element Method",
for outstanding contributions spanning the wide field of mechanics
and engineering.
The Prince Philip Medal, instigated
in 1989, is awarded periodically to an engineer of any nationality "who
has made an exceptional contribution to engineering as a whole
through practice, management or education."
Olek Zienkiewicz is Emeritus Professor and former Director of
the Institute for Numerical Methods in Engineering at the University
of Wales, Swansea. He holds the UNESCO Chair of Numerical Methods
in Engineering at the Technical University of Catalunya in Barcelona
and is a past holder of the Joe C Walter Chair of Engineering at
the University of Texas, Austin.
Born in Surrey in 1921, he attended primary and secondary schools
in Poland and obtained his BSc, PhD and DSc at Imperial College.
Since his first paper in 1947 dealing with numerical approximation
to the stress analysis of dams, he has published nearly 600 papers
and written or edited more than 25 books. He was one of the early
pioneers of the Finite Element Method and was the first to realise
its potential for the solution to problems outside the area of
solid mechanics. His own contribution to the Method's development
made it the widely applicable tool of computational mechanics and
engineering that it is today. His books on the Finite Element Method
were the first to present the subject and to this day remain the
standard reference texts.
In his research career, he has personally supervised over 70 PhD
students, many of whom today hold leading positions in academia
and industry. He also founded the first journal dealing with computational
mechanics in 1968 (International Journal of Numerical Methods in
Engineering) which is still the major journal for the field of
Numerical Computations. He has served as a member of Council of
the Institution of Civil Engineers and was the Chairman of the
Analysis and Design Committee of the International Congress for
Large Dams.
Professor Zienkiewicz has received honorary degrees from Ireland,
Belgium, Norway, Sweden, China, Poland, Scotland, Wales, France,
England, Italy, Portugal, Hong Kong, Hungary and the United States.
He has been the recipient of many awards, including the title of
Commander of the British Empire, the prestigious Royal Medal of
the Royal Society from HM Queen Elizabeth II, the Carl Friedrich
Gauss Medal of the West German Academy of Science, the Nathan Newmark
Medal of the American Society of Civil Engineers, the Newton-Gauss
Medal of the International Association for Computational Mechanics,
the Gold Medal of the Institution for Mathematics and its Applications,
a Gold Medal from the Institution of Structural Engineers and the
Timoshenko Medal of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
He was elected to the Royal Society and The Royal Academy of Engineering
in 1979 and is a Foreign Member of the United States National Academy
of Engineering, the Polish Academy of Science, the Italian National
Academy of Sciences and the Chinese National Academy of Sciences.
Professor Zienkiewicz will receive the Prince Philip Medal from
HRH Duke of Edinburgh at Buckingham Palace on 16 June 2006”.
http://www.raeng.org.uk/news/releases/shownews.htm?NewsID=317