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Professor Olgierd (Olek) Cecil Zienkiewicz (1921 – 2009)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olgierd_Zienkiewicz

Olgierd Cecil Zienkiewicz, CBE, FREng, FRS was a British academic of Polish descent, mathematician, and civil engineer. He was born in Caterham, England. He was one of the early pioneers of the finite element method. Since his first paper in 1947 dealing with numerical approximation to the stress analysis of dams, he published nearly 600 papers and wrote or edited more than 25 books.

Early education:
His school education took place in Poland, where his father was a judge of the Katowice district. He and his family moved to the UK due to the World War II. Zienkiewicz studied in the early 1940s at Imperial College London for an undergraduate BSc (Hons) degree in Civil Engineering which he obtained in 1943 with first class honours. Then, after being offered a scholarship, he stayed for two more years at Imperial College to carry out research on dams under the supervision of Professors A. J. S. Pippard and Sir R. V. Southwell. He was awarded the PhD degree in 1945 with his thesis title "Classical theories of gravity dam design in the light of modern analytical methods".

Contributions to science:
Zienkiewicz was notable for having recognized the general potential for using the finite element method to resolve problems in areas outside the area of solid mechanics. The idea behind finite elements design is to develop tools based in computational mechanics schemes that can be useful to designers, not solely for research purposes. His books on the Finite Element Method were the first to present the subject and to this day remain the standard reference texts. He also founded the first journal dealing with computational mechanics in 1968 (International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering), which is still the major journal for the field of Numerical Computations.

International recognition:
The international range of Zienkiewicz' academic experiences has been geographically diverse. He became a lecturer at the Department of Engineering, University of Edinburgh, UK (1949–1957) before becoming Professor of Structural and Civil Engineering at Northwestern University, Illinois, USA (1957–1961). From 1961 to 1988 he was Head of the Department of Civil Engineering at Swansea University. He was latterly Professor Emeritus of this institution. Other teaching positions have included:
1. International Centre for Numerical Methods in Engineering at CIMNE, Barcelona, Spain—Professor of Numerical Methods in Engineering
2. Polytechnic University of Catalonia at Barcelona, Spain—UNESCO Chair of Numerical Methods in Engineering
3. University of Texas, Austin—Joe C. Walter Chair of Engineering.

Honours:
Zienkiewicz received honorary degrees from Ireland, Belgium, Norway, Sweden, China, Poland, Scotland, Wales, France, England, Italy, Portugal, Hungary and the United States.

He was elected to a number of learned societies,[4] including:
Royal Society
Royal Academy of Engineering, 1979
United States National Academy of Engineering (foreign member)
Polish Academy of Science
Italian National Academy of Sciences
Chinese Academy of Sciences

He has been the recipient of many honors, awards, and medals. including

Commander of the British Empire
Royal Medal (Royal Society)
Carl Friedrich Gauss Medal (West German Academy of Science)
Nathan Newmark Medal (American Society of Civil Engineers)
Newton Gauss Medal (International Association for Computational Mechanics)
Gold Medal (Institution for Mathematics and its Applications)
Gold Medal (Institution of Structural Engineers)
Timoshenko Medal (American Society of Mechanical Engineers)
Prince Philip Medal (Royal Academy of Engineering),
Zienkiewicz has been listed as an ISI Highly Cited Author in Engineering by the ISI Web of Knowledge, Thomson Scientific Company.

He was instrumental in setting up the association of computational mechanics in engineering (ACME) for the United Kingdom in 1992 and was the honorary president for the association for the rest of his life.

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