Victor Vâlcovici Explained

Victor Vâlcovici
Birth Date:21 September 1885
Birth Place:Galați, Kingdom of Romania
Death Place:Bucharest, Socialist Republic of Romania
Resting Place:Bellu Cemetery, Bucharest
Fields:Mathematics, Mechanics
Workplaces:University of Iași
Polytechnic School of Timișoara
University of Bucharest
Education:Nicolae Bălcescu High School
Alma Mater:University of Bucharest
University of Göttingen
Thesis Title:Ueber die diskontinuierliche Flussigkeitsbewegungen mit zwei freien Strahlen
Thesis Url:https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/007898486
Thesis Year:1913
Doctoral Advisor:Ludwig Prandtl
Module:
Embed:yes
Title1:Minister of Public Works and Communications
Term Start1:April 18, 1931
Term End1:June 5, 1932
Predecessor1:Ion Răducanu
Successor1:Gheorghe Mironescu
Primeminister1:Nicolae Iorga
Title2:Minister of Justice
Term Start2:January 7
Term End2:January 9, 1932
Predecessor2:Constantin Hamangiu
Primeminister2:Nicolae Iorga

Victor Vâlcovici ( - 21 June 1970) was a Romanian mechanician and mathematician.

Biography

Born into a modest family in Galați, he graduated first in his class in 1904 from Nicolae Bălcescu High School in Brăila. Entering the University of Bucharest on a scholarship, he attended its faculty of sciences, where he had as teachers Spiru Haret and Gheorghe Țițeica.[1] After graduating in 1907 with a degree in mathematics, he taught high school for two years before leaving for University of Göttingen on another scholarship to pursue a doctorate in mathematics. He wrote his thesis under the direction of Ludwig Prandtl and defended it in 1913; the thesis, titled Ueber die diskontinuierliche Flussigkeitsbewegungen mit zwei freien Strahlen (Discontinuous flow of liquids in two free dimensions),[2] amplified upon the work of Bernhard Riemann.

He was subsequently named assistant professor of mechanics at the University of Iași, rising to full professor in 1918.[3] In 1921, he became rector of the Polytechnic School of Timișoara. There, he was also professor of rational mechanics and founded a laboratory dedicated to the field. During his nine years as rector, he worked to place the recently founded university on a solid foundation.[3] From 1930 until retiring in 1962, he taught experimental mechanics at the University of Bucharest. In the government of Nicolae Iorga, he served as Minister of Public Works from 1931 to 1932. During this time, he introduced a modern road network that featured paved highways.[4] [3] In 1936 he gave an invited talk at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Oslo, with title Sur le sillage derrière un obstacle circulaire (In the wake of a circular obstacle).

Elected a corresponding member of the Romanian Academy in 1936,[5] he was stripped of his membership by the new communist regime in 1948,[6] but made a titular member of the Romanian Academy in 1965.[7] His numerous articles on theoretical and applied mechanics covered topics such as the principles of variational mechanics, the mechanics of ideal fluid flow, the theory of elasticity and astronomy.[4]

He died in 1970 in Bucharest, and was buried in the city's Bellu Cemetery. Streets have been named after Victor Vâlcovici in Brăila, Galați, and Timișoara; a school in Galați also bears his name.

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References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gălățeni care au uimit lumea – Victor Vâlcovici. D.C.. Predescu. ro. . May 23, 2013. February 16, 2022.
  2. Otlăcan, pp. 125–6
  3. Otlăcan, p. 127
  4. Hager, p. 1361
  5. Otlăcan, p. 126, 127
  6. Păun Ion. Otiman. Păun Otiman. 1948–Anul imensei jertfe a Academiei Române. ro. Akademos. 4. 31. December 2013. 115–124.
  7. Web site: Membrii Academiei Române din 1866 până în prezent. ro. Romanian Academy.