1. Diverging trends before the 20th century
2. The beginnings of fluid dynamics in Goettingen, 1904-1914
3. Aviation and the rise of aerodynamics in the World War I
4. The internationalization of fluid mechanics in the 1920s
5. A 'working program' for research on turbulence
6. Aerodynamics comes of age
7. New applications
8. Prandtl, fluid dynamics and National Socialism
9. New centers
10. Fluid dynamics on the eve of the Second World War
11. Mysterious Harmony: Fluid dynamics between science and
technology
Michael Eckert studied physics at the Technical University Munich and received his PhD in theoretical physics from the University Bayreuth in 1979. He dedicated his subsequent career to the history of physics--with ramifications in scientific journalism and schoolbook editing. Since 1981 he was engaged in several projects on the history of modern physics at the Deutsches Museum, Munich. He authored and co-authored books and articles on such diverse specialties as the history of soild state physics and plasma physics. Recently he was directing a project on the famous theoretical physicist Arnold Sommerfeld which resulted in a two-volume edition of Sommerfeld's scientic correspondence (2000 and 2004). His present work on the history of fluid dynamics is part of a research group at the Deutsches Museum, funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, with the focus on science-technology-interactions in the 20th century.
"For its scope, and the detail Eckert gives in his discussions of
many such examples, this excellent book can be strongly
recommended."
The Aerospace Professional
"For all lovers and aficionados of fluid mechanics, professionals,
and amateurs, 'The Dawn of Fluid Dynamics: A Discipline Between
Science and
Technology' is a recommended read."
AIAA Journal, April 2007
"One's library is incomplete without it...Essential." CHOICE,
October 2006
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