Hans G. Hornung

Hans G. Hornung
Born Palestine
Residence United States
Germany
Australia
Fields aeronautics
Institutions Caltech
Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V.
Doctoral advisor John Stollery, Neil Freeman
Known for real gas effects and hypersonic airflow characterization

Hans G. Hornung is an emeritus C. L. “Kelly” Johnson Professor of Aeronautics and Director of the Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology (GALCIT). He received his bachelor (1960) and master (1962) degrees from the University of Melbourne and his Ph. D. degree (1965) in Aeronautics from Imperial College, London. He worked in the Aeronautical Research Laboratories, Melbourne (196263, and 196567), and in the Physics Department of the Australian National University (196780), with a sabbatical year as a Humboldt Fellow in Darmstadt, Germany, 1974. In 1980 he accepted an offer to head the Institute for Experimental Fluid Mechanics of the DLR in Göttingen, Germany. He left Germany in 1987 to serve as the director of GALCIT. During his time at GALCIT he oversaw the construction of three large facilities: the T5 hypervelocity shock tunnel, the John Lucas Adaptive-Wall Wind Tunnel, and a supersonic Ludwieg tube.

He has made contributions in gasdynamics, notably Mach reflection and effects of dissociation, in separated flows, and in wind tunnel technology. He was elected as a foreign member to the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences in 1991 and as a foreign associate to the National Academy of Engineering in 1997.[1]

Books

Hans G. Hornung, Dimensional Analysis: Examples of the Use of Symmetry, Dover Publications (2006)

Honors

References

  1. National Academy of Engineering, Member Directory

External links

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