Edward Norton Lorenz

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Dr. Lorenz at work

Edward Norton Lorenz is an American mathematician and meteorologist, and a contributor to the chaos theory and inventor of the strange attractor notion. He coined the term butterfly effect.

Life

Edward Norton Lorenz was born in West Haven, Connecticut, on May 23, 1917. He studied mathematics at both Dartmouth College in New Hampshire and Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

During World War II, he served as a weather forecaster for the United States Army Air Corps.

After his return from the war, he decided to study meteorology, in which he earned two degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he later was a professor for many years.

Professor Emeritus at the MIT since 1981, Lorenz has received many awards for his work, among which:

Work

Lorenz studied the way air moves around in the atmosphere, for which he build a mathematical model.

As Lorenz studied weather patterns more closely, he began to realize that the weather did not always change as predicted; observed that minute variations in the initial values of variables in his primitive computer weather model (c. 1960) would result in grossly divergent weather patterns. This sensitive dependence on initial conditions came to be known as the butterfly effect.

Lorenz went on to explore the underlying mathematics and published his conclusions in a seminal work in titled Deterministic Nonperiodic Flow, in which he described a relatively simple system of equations that resulted in a pattern of infinite complexity, the Lorenz attractor.

Publications

See also: Edward Norton Lorenz, 12 May, 1917, 1955, 1963, 1967, 1969, 1973, 1975, 1976