Generated by GPT-5-mini| Eitan Tadmor | |
|---|---|
| Name | Eitan Tadmor |
| Fields | Applied Mathematics, Numerical Analysis, Partial Differential Equations |
| Workplaces | University of Maryland, University of California, Los Angeles |
| Alma mater | Tel Aviv University |
Eitan Tadmor is an applied mathematician known for contributions to numerical analysis, partial differential equations, and scientific computing. He has held faculty positions at major research universities and collaborated with researchers across institutions and international research centers. His work connects theory and computation through development of numerical methods and analysis for nonlinear problems and kinetic equations.
Born in Israel, Tadmor completed undergraduate and graduate studies at Tel Aviv University where he trained in applied mathematics and analysis. He pursued doctoral research under advisors linked to Israeli mathematical communities and engaged with research groups at institutions such as Weizmann Institute of Science and visiting programs at Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. Early influences included interactions with researchers from Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, and international visitors from Princeton University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Tadmor served as faculty at the University of Maryland, College Park before taking a position at the University of California, Los Angeles. He participated in collaborative projects with scholars at California Institute of Technology, Stanford University, and European centers including École Polytechnique and Université Paris-Saclay. Guest appointments and visiting professorships included stints at Institute for Advanced Study, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences, and workshops at Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences. He has been active in programs run by Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, American Mathematical Society, and international conferences such as International Congress of Mathematicians and SIAM Conference on Analysis of Partial Differential Equations.
Tadmor's research spans numerical schemes for conservation laws, stability theory for nonlinear partial differential equations, and kinetic descriptions of collective dynamics. He developed and analyzed high-resolution methods related to the design principles of flux-splitting and entropy-stable schemes used in computations alongside methodologies from Godunov-type approaches and Riemann problem frameworks. His work on spectral methods connects to studies by researchers at National Center for Atmospheric Research and techniques employed in computational fluid dynamics codes used at NASA and European Space Agency. Contributions include rigorous analysis of mean-field limits connecting particle systems studied in contexts like Vlasov equation and swarming models related to research at CIRM and IPAM. He advanced entropy-based frameworks interfacing with results from Lax theory, Kruzkov estimates, and stability analyses associated with scholars at University of Chicago and University of Cambridge. Collaborative studies addressed nonlinear diffusion, aggregation phenomena, and metastability with links to probabilistic techniques used at Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences and University of Warwick.
Tadmor received recognition from professional societies including honors associated with Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics and awards tied to contributions in numerical analysis and mathematical physics. He was invited to speak at major venues such as International Congress of Mathematicians and named in lecture series hosted by Institute for Mathematics and its Applications and Mathematical Sciences Research Institute. His work earned fellowships and visiting appointments at institutes like Institute for Advanced Study and research prizes connected to mathematical societies in North America and Europe.
Tadmor authored influential articles and monographs on numerical methods, stability theory, and kinetic equations published in journals associated with American Mathematical Society, SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis, and other venues linked to Elsevier. Representative topics include entropy-stable schemes, spectral viscosity methods, and mean-field limits for interacting particle systems; these works intersect with literature by authors at Princeton University, ETH Zurich, and Imperial College London.
In his academic roles, Tadmor supervised graduate students and postdoctoral researchers who later joined faculties at institutions such as University of California, Berkeley, Columbia University, and Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. He taught courses in applied mathematics, numerical analysis, and partial differential equations drawing on curricula common at Tel Aviv University, University of Maryland, College Park, and UCLA. He participated in summer schools and training programs organized by Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics, and IPAM to mentor early-career researchers.
Category:Applied mathematicians