Lucy Cavendish Fellow was a key speaker at UN and Air University’s events
Professor Neil Stott discussed social innovation during fieldwork in the US.
Dr Jurgen Becque won the prize for providing accurate solutions to a century-unresolved set of equations.
The Moisseiff Award by the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) recognizes substantial advances in the field of structural mechanics and design. Lucy Cavendish College’s Director of Studies in Engineering and Fellow, Dr Jurgen Becque, received the award for providing approximate yet highly accurate solutions to the Föppl-von Karman equations. These equations describe the stability of compressed plates and have many practical applications, but have been unresolved for more than a century.
Jurgen says, “I am honoured to be recognized by the ASCE for my work. I believe these new insights in structural mechanics will pave the way for practical design methodologies for plated structures which are based on rational analysis, rather than the empirical equations we have been using so far.”
This prize, established by the Society in April 1947, is a memorial in recognition of the accomplishments of Leon S. Moisseiff, M.ASCE, a notable contributor to the science and art of structural design. Funds were provided by Moisseiff's friends to set up the medal and to establish a trust fund to support the yearly awards.
Leon Moisseiff might be known to some as the engineer responsible for one of the most spectacular structural collapses in history: that of the Tacoma Narrows suspension bridge in 1940. Nevertheless, the award recognizes the fact that Moisseiff’s novel insight into the mechanics of suspension bridges has allowed us to build them with a lot less material, paving the way for the slender bridges with super-long spans we know today. Because of their increased slenderness, however, these bridges become susceptible to dynamic instability under wind loading, an unknown phenomenon at the time of Moisseiff’s design.
Professor Neil Stott discussed social innovation during fieldwork in the US.
Lucy Cavendish Fellow, Dr Liam Saddington, and University colleagues secured research funding from CATS Future of Therapeutic.
Dr Deborah Talmi and colleagues’ research aims to reconcile an important theoretical gap in advancing the understanding of PTSD.