Israeli physicist and chemist (born 1949)
Itamar Procaccia ((Hebrew : איתמר פרוקצ'יה ); born September 29, 1949, in Tel Aviv) is an Israeli physicist and chemist who has made contributions to areas in statistical physics , nonlinear dynamics , soft matter , and turbulence .
Procaccia studied chemistry at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem with and obtained a bachelor's degree in 1973 and obtained a doctorate in theoretical chemistry in 1976. From 1977 to 1979, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology . Since 1979 he has been at the Weizmann Institute, where he became a professor in 1985.
With Peter Grassberger , he introduced the correlation dimension as a measure of fractal dimension in 1983 (often referred to as the Grassberger–Procaccia algorithm).[ 1]
He has held guest appointments at the City University of New York , the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques , Nordita , the Isaac Newton Institute , Rockefeller University , the École normale supérieure de Lyon , and the University of Chicago , among others.
He is a fellow of the American Physical Society , the Institute of Physics and a member of the Leopoldina and the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters . In 2009 he received the Israel Prize for physics. In 2017 he received the EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Prize .
Selected publications
Peter Grassberger , Itamar Procaccia Measuring the Strangeness of Strange Attractors , Physica D , 9 , (1983), 189–208
Peter Grassberger , Itamar Procaccia Characterization of strange attractors , Physical Review Letters, 50 , (1983), 346–349
Thomas C. Halsey, Mogens H. Jensen, Leo P. Kadanoff, Itamar Procaccia, and Boris I. Shraiman "Fractal measures and their singularities: The characterization of strange sets" , Physics A, 33 1141 (1986)
References
External links
International National Academics
Concepts
Theoretical branches Chaotic maps (list )
Physical systems Chaos theorists Related articles