George H. Bryan - Place of Birth, Date of Birth, Age, Wiki, Facts, Net Worth, Birthday, Biography and Family

George H. Bryan, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Family, Facts, Age, Net Worth, Biography and More in FamedBorn.com


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Mar 01, 1864 Cambridge, England, United Kingdom Died on 13 Oct 1928 (aged 64)

Welsh mathematician

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About George H. Bryan

  • George Hartley Bryan FRS (1 March 1864, Cambridge – 13 October 1928, Bordighera) was an English applied mathematician who was an authority on thermodynamics and aeronautics.
  • He was educated at Peterhouse College, Cambridge, obtaining his BA in 1886 (as 5th wrangler), MA in 1890, and DSc in 1896.
  • He was a professor at University College of North Wales, and is generally credited with developing the modern mathematical treatment of the motion of airplanes in flight as rigid bodies with six degrees of freedom.
  • Aside from minor differences in notation, Bryan's 1911 equations are the same as those used today to evaluate modern aircraft.
  • (Perhaps surprisingly, Bryan's equations—published just eight years after the first aircraft flew—are most accurate when applied to supersonic jets.) In evaluating aircraft mathematically, Bryan focused on issues of aerodynamic stability rather than on control; stability and control of an aircraft tend to lie on opposite ends of the same spectrum.
  • Bryan's aeronautic results were an extension of his earlier work in fluid dynamics.
  • In 1888, Bryan developed mathematical models for fluid pressures within a pipe and for external buckling pressures.
  • These models are still used today. In 1890, Bryan discovered the so-called "wave inertia effect" in axi-symmetric thin elastic shells.
  • This effect is the theoretical basis for modern solid-state gyroscopy using hemispherical or "wine-glass" resonators, which were elaborated by Dr.
  • David D.
  • Lynch, et al.
  • almost a century after Bryan's original discovery.
  • These novel, precise sensors are now developed in the United States, Ukraine, Singapore, Republic of Korea, France, RF, South Africa, and mainland China.
  • They are used for satellite guidance systems, among other applications. Bryan's seismologic studies of Coriolis effects in massive liquid spheres have received experimental confirmation from data collected by seismologic stations set up to detect nuclear explosions in the aftermath of World War II, as well as from seismographic data from the Great Chilean earthquake of 1960.

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