Aneesur Rahman

For other uses, see Anisur Rahman (disambiguation).
Aneesur Rahman
Born (1927-08-24)August 24, 1927
Hyderabad, British India
Died 6 June 1987(1987-06-06) (aged 59)
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Alma mater Cambridge, Louvain
Notable awards Irving Langmuir Award (1977)

Aneesur Rahman (24 August 1927 – 6 June 1987[1]) pioneered the application of computational methods to physical systems. His 1964 paper [2] on liquid argon studied a system of 864 argon atoms on a CDC 3600 computer, using a Lennard-Jones potential. His algorithms still form the basis for many codes written today. Moreover, he worked on a wide variety of problems, such as the microcanonical ensemble approach to lattice gauge theory, which he invented [3] [4] with David J E Callaway.

Aneesur Rahman was a native of Hyderabad, India. He earned his undergraduate degree in physics and mathematics from Cambridge University in England and his Ph.D. in theoretical physics from Louvain University in Belgium. In 1960, Dr. Rahman began a 25-year tenure as a physicist at the Argonne National Laboratory (Argonne, Ill.). In 1985, Dr. Rahman joined the faculty at the University of Minnesota as a professor of physics and fellow at the Supercomputer Institute.

Dr. Rahman is known as the father of molecular dynamics,[5] a discipline of physics that utilizes computers to simulate microscopic behavior of physical systems. In 1977 Dr. Rahman was awarded the Irving Langmuir Prize by the American Physical Society. Enrico Fermi's Group (at Los Alamos during the 1950s), George Vineyard's group (radiation damage studies at Brookhaven in 1960), as well as Tom Wainwright and Berni Alder's group (at the Livermore Radiation Laboratory in the 1950s) developed generalized leapfrog and event-driven molecular dynamics algorithms a bit earlier than Rahman. Berni Alder received a National Medal of Science award from President Obama in 2009.

The American Physical Society annually awards the Aneesur Rahman Prize for outstanding achievement in computational research. First awarded in 1993, the Aneesur Rahman Prize is the highest honour in the field of computational physics given by the American Physical Society.

Argonne National Laboratory offers a special postdoctoral fellowship named after Aneesur Rahman to be awarded internationally on an annual basis to an outstanding doctoral scientist who is at an early point in a promising career.

References

  1. Sinha, Sunil K.; Schuller, Ivan K.; Postol, Ted A.; Parrinello, Michele; Campbell, Charles E. (August 1988). "Aneesur Rahman". Physics Today. 41 (8): 97. Bibcode:1988PhT....41h..97S. doi:10.1063/1.2811542.
  2. A. Rahman (1964). "Correlations in the Motion of Atoms in Liquid Argon". Physical Review. 136: A405-A411. Bibcode:1964PhRv..136..405R. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.136.A405.
  3. DJE Callaway; A Rahman (1982). "Microcanonical Ensemble Formulation of Lattice Gauge Theory". Phys. Rev. Lett. 49: 613–616. Bibcode:1982PhRvL..49..613C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.49.613.
  4. DJE Callaway; A Rahman (1983). "Lattice gauge theory in the microcanonical ensemble". Phys. Rev. D. 28: 1506–1514. Bibcode:1983PhRvD..28.1506C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.28.1506.
  5. "Named Fellowships Luminary - Aneesur Rahman". Argonne National Laboratory. Retrieved 2016-04-23.
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