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Denis Blackmore

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Mathematician

Name
  
Denis Blackmore

Known for
  
Dynamical Systems

Alma mater
  
NYU-Poly


Denis Blackmore

Institutions
  
New Jersey Institute of Technology

Education
  
Polytechnic Institute of New York University

Books
  
Frontiers of Applied and Computational Mathematics: Proceedings of the 2008 Conference

Fields
  
Applied mathematics, Differential topology

njit math 491 695 chaos lecture 8 special guest lecture by professor denis blackmore


Denis Louis Blackmore is an American mathematician and a full professor of the Department of Mathematical Sciences at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. He is also one of the founding members of the Center for Applied Mathematics and Statistics at NJIT. Dr. Blackmore is mainly known for his many contributions in the fields of Dynamical Systems and Differential Topology. In addition to this, he has many contributions in other fields of Applied Mathematics, Physics, Biology, and Engineering.

Contents

Denis Blackmore Denis Blackmore Department of Mathematical Sciences

Career and recognitions

Dr. Blackmore received a BS in Aerospace Engineering from the Polytechnic University in Brooklyn (now NYU-Poly). From the same institution he received his MS and PhD in Mathematics in 1966 and 1971 respectively.

His research as a senior undergraduate and graduate student was in the areas of boundary layer theory in fluid mechanics and the qualitative theory of ordinary differential equations. He was a Visiting Professor of Mathematics at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences during the 1989–90 academic year.

In recognition for his work in differential equations and dynamical systems, Dr. Blackmore was invited in 1988 to give a series of lectures at the Institute of Mathematics, Academia Sinica, Beijing, China and several universities in X´ian and Guangzhou. Recently, he was invited back to China to lecture on dynamical systems at the Nankei Institute, and has been invited to work with dynamical systems experts (including Mel´nikov and Prykarpatsky) in Russia and Ukraine.

Dr. Blackmore organized the 834th Meeting of the American Mathematical Society held at NJIT in April, 1987. He has also organized numerous seminars and colloquia in the mathematical sciences, and served on the organizing committee of the 1992 Japan-USA Symposium on Flexible Automation. Recently, he organized a minisymposium on ´´Integrable Dynamical Systems and Their Applications´´ for the 1995 International Congress on Industrial and Applied Mathematics in Hamburg, Germany. Blackmore is a member of the National Honor Societies Sigma Xi and Tau Beta Pi, and was awarded the Harlan Perlis Research Award from NJIT in 1993.

Papers

  • Denis L. Blackmore; C. Wang (2003). "Morse index for autonomous linear Hamiltonian systems". International Journal of Differential Equations and Applications. 7: 295–309. 
  • Denis L. Blackmore; Ya V. Mykytiuk; A. Prykarpatsky (2003). "The Lax solution to a Hamilton–Jacobi equation and its generalizations: Part 2". Nonlinear Analysis. 55 (5): 629–640. doi:10.1016/j.na.2003.08.004. 
  • Denis L. Blackmore; N. Aboobaker; J. Meegoda (2003). "Fractionation and segregation of suspended particles using acoustic and flow fields". ASCE Journal of Environmental Engineering. 129 (5): 427–434. doi:10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9372(2003)129:5(427). 
  • Denis L. Blackmore (2002). "A perspective on vibration-induced size segregation of granular materials". Journal of Chemical Engineering Science. 57 (2): 265–275. doi:10.1016/S0009-2509(01)00380-3. 
  • Denis L. Blackmore; J. Chen (2002). "On the exponentially self-regulating population model". Chaos, Solitons and Fractals. 14 (9): 1433–1450. doi:10.1016/S0960-0779(02)00074-7. 
  • Denis L. Blackmore; J. Chen; J. Perez; M. Savescu (2001). "Dynamical properties of discrete Lotka–Volterra equations". Chaos, Solitons and Fractals. 12 (13): 2553–2568. doi:10.1016/S0960-0779(00)00214-9. 
  • YouTube videos

  • Dennis Blackmore – NJIT Professor of Mathematical Sciences
  • Equations of Pi
  • References

    Denis Blackmore Wikipedia