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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Horace_LambHorace Lamb - Wikipedia

    Sir Horace Lamb FRS (27 November 1849 – 4 December 1934) was a British applied mathematician and author of several influential texts on classical physics, among them Hydrodynamics (1895) and Dynamical Theory of Sound (1910). Both of these books remain in print. The word vorticity was invented by Lamb in 1916.

  2. Horace Lamb ( Stockport, Inglaterra, 29 de novembro de 1849 — Cambridge, 4 de dezembro de 1934) foi um matemático e físico britânico . Foi professor da Cátedra Beyer de Matemática Aplicada, de 1888 a 1920. Está sepultado no Ascension Parish Burial Ground .

  3. Quick Info. Born. 29 November 1849. Stockport, England. Died. 4 December 1934. Cambridge, England. Summary. Horace Lamb wrote important texts and made important contributions to applied mathematics, in particular to acoustics and fluid dynamics. View three larger pictures. Biography.

  4. Sir Horace Lamb was an English mathematician who contributed to the field of mathematical physics. In 1872 Lamb was elected a fellow and lecturer of Trinity College, Cambridge, and three years later he became professor of mathematics at Adelaide University, S.Aus. He returned to England in 1885 to.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. 1 de jul. de 2017 · The paper examines aspects of the career of Professor Sir Horace Lamb, FRS, a highly regarded classical fluid mechanicist, who, over a period of some thirty-five years at Manchester, made notable contributions in research, in education and in wise administration at both national and university levels.

    • Brian Launder
    • 2017
  6. Following Rayleigh’s work, Horace Lamb, a British applied mathematician, reported the waves discovered in plates in one of his historic publications, On Waves in an Elastic Plate, in 1917 [2], and the waves were named after him as Lamb waves.

  7. Sir Horace Lamb, 1849-1934. SIR HORACE LAMB. 1849-1934. H orace L amb was born at Stockport, November 29, 1849. His father, John Lamb, was a foreman in a cotton mill, who had gained some distinction by an invention for the improvement of spinning machines. John Lamb died when his son was quite young.