David Abrahams | |
---|---|
Born |
Manchester |
February 15, 1958
Nationality | British |
Fields | mathematics |
Institutions |
University of Manchester University of Newcastle upon Tyne Keele University |
Alma mater | Imperial College London |
Doctoral advisor | Frank Leppington |
Ian David Abrahams (born 15 January 1958) is an English mathematician and Beyer Professor of Applied Mathematics at the University of Manchester, 2008-2016. From 2014-16 he was Director of the International Centre for Mathematical Sciences in Edinburgh and in October 2016 he succeeds John Toland as Director of the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences, and NM Rothschild and Sons Professor of Mathematics, in Cambridge. He was President 2007-2009, of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications.
Born in Manchester, Abrahams was the son of Harry Abrahams and of Leila Abrahams.
He completed his BSc in aeronautical engineering in 1979 and PhD (and DIC) in applied mathematics in 1982, both at Imperial College London. There he won two scholarships and the Finsbury Medal for top undergraduate. For his PhD he was supervised by Frank Leppington for a thesis entitled The scattering of sound by finite thin elastic plates and cavities.
In the same year, he moved to Manchester on a 1-year contract. This was the beginning of a collaboration with GR Wickham. First, they developed some general techniques for solving matrix Wiener–Hopf problems and this gave the solution to a basic problem of diffraction theory, namely, scattering by two parallel, semi-infinite, staggered plates. Motivated by the problems of austenitic steel welds, they went on to develop a theory for wave propagation in certain inhomogeneous anisotropic solids. They also gave asymptotic solutions for scattering by small defects in an elastic half-space making use of a certain expansion of the half-space Green's function.