Ed Lorenz, a founder of chaos theory, also developed revolutionary ideas about the energetics of stratified, rotating fluids and made important contributions to the understanding of atmospheric dynamics and weather prediction. He was on the faculty of MIT from 1955 to his retirement in 1988. Through his profound contributions to science as well as his quiet demeanor, gentle humility, and love of nature, he set a compelling example of what it means to be a gentleman and a scholar.
To learn more, please see:
Kerry Emanuel’s biography of Ed Lorenz for the National Academy of Sciences here.
A list of Ed Lorenz's publications, including autobiographical works and his famous 1963 paper Deterministic Nonperiodic Flow (copyrighted material unavailable for distribution).
A short documentary on the indelible mark made by Lorenz and his close friend and collaborator Jule Charney on MIT and the field of meteorology as a whole.
MIT's Technology Review's 2011 article about how Lorenz's ground-breaking research on chaos overthrew the idea of the clockwork universe, and how nearly every field of science since has been affected.
Physics Today's May 2013 issue Chaos at 50, a 50-year anniversary celebration of one of the great scientific revolutions of the 20th century.
Photos courtesy of the MIT Museum; Wikimedia Commons; courtesy of Jim Fullmer, PhD ’79; Kerry Emanuel; MIT News Office photo; Omari Stephens ’08/The Tech.