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David George Crighton : ウィキペディア英語版
David Crighton

David George Crighton, MA, PhD, FRS (15 November 1942 – 12 April 2000) was a British mathematician and physicist.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 work=University of St. Andrews on David Crighton )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=DAMTP David Crighton: An obituary by Keith Moffat )
== Life ==
Crighton was born in Llandudno. His mother, Violet Grace Garrison, had been sent because of the bombing of London during World War II. He didn't become interested in mathematics until his last two years at Watford Grammar School for Boys. He entered St John's College, Cambridge in 1961 and started lecturing at Woolwich Polytechnic (today University of Greenwich) in 1964, having completed only his bachelor's degree.
A few years later he met John Ffowcs Williams and started to work for him at Imperial College London, while simultaneously studying for his doctorate (awarded in 1969) at the same place. In 1974, he was appointed as a Research Fellow in the Department of Engineering at the University of Cambridge.
However, he never took up this post, but instead accepted the chair in Applied Mathematics at the University of Leeds, which he held until 1986.
He then returned to Cambridge as professor of Applied Mathematics in succession to George Batchelor.
Later he became a well-loved Master of Jesus College (1997–2000), and was head of the Applied Mathematics department (DAMTP), where Stephen Hawking worked, in Cambridge between 1991 and 2000, where he was held in huge regard by the faculty and students.
The Institute of Mathematics and its Applications and the London Mathematical Society instituted the David Crighton Medal in 2002 in Crighton's honour. The Award is made triennially by the Councils of the Institute and the Society, with the first award in 2003. The silver gilt medal is awarded to a mathematician who is normally resident in the mathematical community represented by the two organisations for services both to mathematics and to the mathematical community.
Away from his mathematical work, Crighton was a devotee of the music of Richard Wagner, as well as music for the piano.

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