Nationality American Name John Lumley Role Professor | ||
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Institutions Pennsylvania State UniversityCornell University Books A First Course in Turbulence, Turbulence - Coherent Structure, Engines: An Introduction, Stochastic tools in turbulence, Still Life with Cars Similar People Hendrik Tennekes, Philip Holmes, Stanley Corrsin, Stephen H Davis | ||
1 Eulerian and Lagrangian Descriptions in Fluid Mechanics
John Leask Lumley (4 November 1930 in Detroit, Michigan – 30 May 2015 in Ithaca, New York) was an American professor mechanical engineering and aerospace engineering at Cornell University. He is widely known for his research in turbulence and is the coauthor of A First Course in Turbulence along with Hendrik Tennekes. He died in May 2015 of brain cancer.
Contents
- 1 Eulerian and Lagrangian Descriptions in Fluid Mechanics
- Academic career
- Honors and awards
- Books authored
- References

Academic career

Lumley received his M.S.E. and Ph.D. degrees from The Johns Hopkins University in 1954 and 1957 respectively. His Ph.D. thesis supervisor was Stanley Corrsin. He started his academic career at the Pennsylvania State University where he became Evan Pugh Professor of Aerospace Engineering. He was also in charge of research on turbulence and transition at the Applied Research Laboratory. In 1977 Lumley joined Cornell University where he was the Professor Emeritus of Mechanical Engineering and Aerospace Engineering until his death in May 2015.
Honors and awards
Lumley received the 1990 Fluid Dynamics Prize of American Physical Society, "For his outstanding contributions to the understanding of turbulent flow, in particular, the fundamental structure of turbulent shear flows, the effects of drag-reducing additives, and his widely recognized contributions to the statistical theory of turbulence, and for his personal and intellectual leadership in the international fluid dynamics community, including his educational films and books, and his long active devotion to the Division of Fluid Dynamics of The American Physical Society." He has also received several other wards, including: