Jerome Kenneth Percus (born 21 June 1926 in New York City; died 7 March 2021)[1] was a physicist and mathematician known for important contributions to statistical physics, chemical physics, and applied mathematics.
In 1958, he published with George J. Yevick a groundbreaking study on the statistical mechanics of classical liquids.[2] They formulated an integral equation (Percus–Yevick equation) that is the foundation for several approximation methods for computing the pair correlation function, and thereby allow the derivation of thermodynamic properties from first principles.
Works
editPercus published several books:
- Combinatorial Methods, Applied Mathematical Sciences 4, Springer 1971
- Mathematics of genome analysis, Cambridge UP 2002
- Mathematical models in developmental biology, Courant Lectures in Mathematics 26, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences 2015 with Stephen Childress
References
edit- ^ "Obituaries | Columbia College Today". college.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2022-03-18.
- ^ Jerome K. Percus, George J. Yevick (1958), "Analysis of Classical Statistical Mechanics by Means of Collective Coordinates", Physical Review (in German), vol. 110, no. 1, pp. 1-13, doi:10.1103/PhysRev.110.1
External links
edit- Homepage an der New York University
- Jerome K. Percus at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- Lebensdaten, Publikationen und Akademischer Stammbaum von Jerome K. Percus bei academictree.org, retrieved 22 April 2018.
- Works by and about Jerome K. Percus in the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek (German Digital Library)