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Mitchell Feigenbaum

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Academic advisor
  
Role
  
Mathematical Physicist

Name
  
Mitchell Feigenbaum


Mitchell Feigenbaum www2rockefellereduresearchimagesuploadheadsh


Born
  
December 19, 1944 (age 79) New York City, United States (
1944-12-19
)

Awards
  
Wolf Prize in Physics, MacArthur Fellowship

People also search for
  
Leo Kadanoff, Marcelo Osvaldo Magnasco, Francis E. Low

Notable awards
  
Notable students
  
Marcelo Osvaldo Magnasco

Mitchell Feigenbaum


Mitchell Jay Feigenbaum (born December 19, 1944) is a mathematical physicist whose pioneering studies in chaos theory led to the discovery of the Feigenbaum constants.

Contents

Mitchell Feigenbaum Mitchell Feigenbaum Wikipedia

Biography

Mitchell Feigenbaum Mitchell Jay Feigenbaum

Feigenbaum was born in New York City, to Polish and Ukrainian Jewish immigrants. He attended Samuel J. Tilden High School, in Brooklyn, New York, and the City College of New York. In 1964 he began his graduate studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Enrolling for graduate study in electrical engineering, he changed his area to physics. He completed his doctorate in 1970 for a thesis on dispersion relations, under the supervision of Professor Francis E. Low.

Mitchell Feigenbaum Mitchell J Feigenbaum Publications

After short positions at Cornell University (1970–1972) and the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (1972–1974), he was offered a longer-term post at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico to study turbulence in fluids. Although that group of researchers was ultimately unable to unravel the currently intractable theory of turbulent fluids, his research led him to study chaotic maps.

Mitchell Feigenbaum Mitchell Feigenbaum YouTube

In 1983, he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship, and in 1986, he was awarded the Wolf Prize in Physics "for his pioneering theoretical studies demonstrating the universal character of non-linear systems, which has made possible the systematic study of chaos". He is a member of the Board of Scientific Governors at The Scripps Research Institute. He has been Toyota Professor at Rockefeller University since 1986.

Work

Mitchell Feigenbaum Mitchell Jay Feigenbaum

Some mathematical mappings involving a single linear parameter exhibit the apparently random behavior known as chaos when the parameter lies within certain ranges. As the parameter is increased towards this region, the mapping undergoes bifurcations at precise values of the parameter. At first there is one stable point, then bifurcating to an oscillation between two values, then bifurcating again to oscillate between four values and so on. In 1975, Dr. Feigenbaum, using the small HP-65 calculator he had been issued, discovered that the ratio of the difference between the values at which such successive period-doubling bifurcations occur tends to a constant of around 4.6692... He was able to provide a mathematical proof of that fact, and he then showed that the same behavior, with the same mathematical constant, would occur within a wide class of mathematical functions, prior to the onset of chaos. For the first time, this universal result enabled mathematicians to take their first steps to unraveling the apparently intractable "random" behavior of chaotic systems. This "ratio of convergence" is now known as the first Feigenbaum constant.

Mitchell Feigenbaum QUOTES BY MITCHELL FEIGENBAUM AZ Quotes

The logistic map is a prominent example of the mappings that Feigenbaum studied in his noted 1978 article: Quantitative Universality for a Class of Nonlinear Transformations.

Mitchell Feigenbaum Mitchell Jay Feigenbaum

Feigenbaum's other contributions include important new fractal methods in cartography, starting when he was hired by Hammond to develop techniques to allow computers to assist in drawing maps. The introduction to the Hammond Atlas (1992) states:

Using fractal geometry to describe natural forms such as coastlines, mathematical physicist Mitchell Feigenbaum developed software capable of reconfiguring coastlines, borders, and mountain ranges to fit a multitude of map scales and projections. Dr. Feigenbaum also created a new computerized type placement program which places thousands of map labels in minutes, a task that previously required days of tedious labor.

In another practical application of his work, he founded Numerix with Michael Goodkin in 1996. The company’s initial product was a software algorithm that dramatically reduced the time required for Monte Carlo pricing of exotic financial derivatives and structured products. Numerix remains one of the leading software providers to financial market participants.

The press release made on the occasion of his receiving the Wolf Prize summed up his works:

The impact of Feigenbaum's discoveries has been phenomenal. It has spanned new fields of theoretical and experimental mathematics ... It is hard to think of any other development in recent theoretical science that has had so broad an impact over so wide a range of fields, spanning both the very pure and the very applied.

Feigenbaum was referenced on the Season 5, Episode 15 ("A Hole in the World") of the TV series Angel. While suffering a deadly illness, the character Winnifred "Fred" Burkle—a major protagonist, who is a physicist—exchanges the following dialogue:

FRED: (sits up, anxiously) Feigenbaum.

WESLEY: (stands) What?

FRED: (panicked) I—I have to find him. He's the master of— I have to have Feigenbaum here.

WESLEY: Who is Feigenbaum?

FRED: (stops, cries) I don't remember.

References

Mitchell Feigenbaum Wikipedia


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