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George F Carrier

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Nationality
  
USA

Name
  
George Carrier

Alma mater
  
Role
  
Mathematician


Doctoral students
  
Fields
  
George F. Carrier pacificmathualbertacagordonmathgenealogyGeo

Born
  
4 May 1918Millinocket, Maine (
1918-05-04
)

Institutions
  
Harvard UniversityBrown University

Known for
  
Fluid dynamicsCombustionTsunamis

Died
  
March 8, 2002, Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

People also search for
  
Carl E Pearson, James N. Goodier, Sheldon Weinbaum

Books
  
Functions of a Complex, Partial Differential Equation, Ordinary Differential Equations

Doctoral advisor
  
J. Norman Goodier

Education
  

George F. Carrier | Wikipedia audio article


George Francis Carrier (May 4, 1918 – March 8, 2002) was a mathematician and the T. Jefferson Coolidge Professor of Applied Mathematics Emeritus of Harvard University. He was particularly noted for his ability to intuitively model a physical system and then deduce an analytical solution. He worked especially in the modeling of fluid mechanics, combustion, and tsunamis.

Contents

Born in Millinocket, Maine, he received a master's in engineering degree in 1939 and a Ph.D. in 1944 from Cornell University with a dissertation in applied mechanics entitled Investigations in the Field of Aeolotropic Elasticity and the Bending of the Sectorial-Plate under the supervision of J. Norman Goodier. He was co-author of a number of mathematical textbooks and over 100 journal papers.

In 1990, he received the National Medal of Science, the United States' highest scientific award, presented by President Bush, for his contributions to the natural sciences.

He died from esophageal cancer on March 8, 2002.

Carrier's Rule

Carrier is known for "Carrier's Rule", a humorous explanation of why divergent asymptotic series often yield good approximations if the first few terms are taken even when the expansion parameter is of order one, while in the case of a convergent series many terms are needed to get a good approximation: “Divergent series converge faster than convergent series because they don't have to converge.”

References

George F. Carrier Wikipedia