Ernst Eckert | |
---|---|
Born | September 8, 1904 Prague, Austria-Hungary |
Died | July 8, 2004 Saint Paul, Minnesota[1] |
(aged 99)
Residence | West St. Paul |
Nationality | United States (1950)[2] |
Fields | Heat transfer, Mass transfer[3] |
Institutions | 1938 Aeronautical Research Institute (Braunschweig) 1945 Wright-Patterson Air Force Base 1951 University of Minnesota (Regents Professor & professor emeritus) |
Alma mater | German Institute of Technology (1927) (Ph.D. - 1931) |
Doctoral students | Regents Professor R. J. Goldstein |
Known for | Eckert number |
Notable awards | ASME Max Jakob medal (1961) Fulbright Award (1962)[2] |
Notes
married Josefine Binder (1931) |
Dr Ernst R. G. Eckert (1904 – 2004) was a scientist who advanced the film cooling technique for aeronautical engines.[4] Eckert worked as a rocket and jet engine scientist at the Aeronautical Research Institute in Braunschweig, Germany, then via Operation Paperclip, began jet propulsion research in 1945 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. In 1951, Eckert joined the University of Minnesota in the department of mechanical engineering. Eckert published more than 550 scientific papers and books. The Eckert number in fluid dynamics was named after him.
Dr. Eckert's son-in-law Horst Henning Winter is a professor of chemical engineering at UMass. Dr. Winter specializes in rheology.