Timoshenko Medal
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The Timoshenko Medal is an award given annually by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) to an individual "in recognition of distinguished contributions to the field of applied mechanics."
The Timoshenko Medal, widely regarded as the highest international award in the field of applied mechanics, was established in 1957 in honor of Stephen P. Timoshenko, world-renowned authority in the field. The Medal "commemorates his contributions as author and teacher."
The actual award is a bronze medal and honorarium. The first award was given in 1957 to Stephen Prokofyevich Timoshenko.
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[edit] Nomination procedure
The Timoshenko Medal Committee consists of the five recent Timoshenko Medalists, the five members of the executive committee of the ASME International Applied Mechanics Division (AMD), and the five recent past chairs of the AMD. Upon receiving recommendations from the international community of applied mechanics, the Committee nominates a single medalist every year. This nomination is subsequently approved by the ASME; no case has been reported that the ASME has ever overruled a nomination of the Timoshenko Medal Committee.
[edit] Acceptance speech
Every year, at the Applied Mechanics Dinner at the ASME winter annual meeting, the Timoshenko Medalist of the year delivers a lecture. Taken as a whole, these lectures provide a long perspective of the field of applied mechanics, as well as capsules of the lives of extraordinary individuals. A project has been initiated to post all Timoshenko Medal Lectures online .
[edit] Timoshenko Medal recipients
- 2006 – Kenneth L. Johnson, The University of Cambridge
- 2005 – Grigory Isaakovich Barenblatt, Department of Mathematics, University of California, Berkeley (USA)
- 2004 – Morton E. Gurtin, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University (USA)
- 2003 – L. Ben Freund Brown University
- 2002 – John W. Hutchinson, Harvard University (USA)
- 2001 – Ted Belytschko
- 2000 – Rodney J. Clifton
- 1999 – Anatol Roshko
- 1998 – Olgierd C. Zienkiewicz, Institute for Numerical Methods in Engineering at the University of Wales, United Kingdom
- 1997 – John R. Willis
- 1996 – J. Tinsley Oden, University of Texas at Austin (USA)
- 1995 – Daniel D. Joseph
- 1994 – James R. Rice, Harvard University (USA)
- 1993 – John L. Lumley
- 1992 – Jan D. Achenbach, Northwestern University (USA)
- 1991 – Yuan-Cheng Fung
- 1990 – Stephen H. Crandall, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (USA)
- 1989 – Bernard Budiansky, Harvard University (USA)
- 1988 – George K. Batchelor
- 1987 – Ronald S. Rivlin
- 1986 – George R. Irwin
- 1985 – Eli Sternberg
- 1984 – Joseph B. Keller
- 1983 – Daniel C. Drucker
- 1982 – John W. Miles
- 1981 – John H. Argyris
- 1980 – Paul M. Naghdi
- 1979 – Jerald L. Ericksen
- 1978 – George F. Carrier, Harvard University (USA)
- 1977 – John D. Eshelby
- 1976 – Erastus H. Lee
- 1975 – Chia-Chiao Lin
- 1974 – Albert E. Green
- 1973 – Eric Reissner
- 1972 – Jacob P. Den Hartog
- 1971 – Howard W. Emmons, Harvard University (USA)
- 1970 – James J. Stoker
- 1969 – Jakob Ackeret
- 1968 – Warner T. Koiter
- 1967 – Hillel Poritsky
- 1966 – William Prager
- 1965 – Sydney Goldstein
- 1964 – Raymond D. Mindlin, Columbia University (USA)
- 1963 – Michael James Lighthill
- 1962 – Maurice A. Biot
- 1961 – James N. Goodier
- 1960 – Cornelius B. Biezano
- Richard Grammel
- 1959 – Sir Richard Southwell
- 1958 – Arpad L. Nadai
- 1957 – Stephen P. Timoshenko
[edit] See also
[edit] Footnotes
- ↑ Applied Mechanics Research and Researchers weblog: A project has started to make the Timoshenko Medalist Lectures available on-line
[edit] External links
- Honors & Awards - Timoshenko Medal, ASME official page, where forms for nomination can be obtained.
- Homepage of the ASME International Applied Mechanics Division