Hermann Bondi

Sir Hermann Bondi KCB FRS (1 November 1919 – 10 September 2005) was an Austrian-British mathematician and cosmologist.

Sir

Hermann Bondi
Born(1919-11-01)1 November 1919
Vienna, Austria
Died10 September 2005(2005-09-10) (aged 85)
Cambridge, England, UK
NationalityAustrian
CitizenshipBritish
EducationTrinity College, Cambridge (M.A., 1940)
Known forSteady State theory
Sticky bead argument
Bondi accretion
Bondi k-calculus
Bondi mass
Bondi–Metzner–Sachs group
Lemaître–Tolman–Bondi metric
Atheism
AwardsGold Medal of the RSA (2001)
Gold Medal od IMA (1988)
Albert Einstein Medal (1983)
Guthrie Medal (1973)
James Scott Prize Lectureship (1960-1963)
Order of the Bath (1973)
Fellow of the Royal Society (1959)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
Physical cosmology
InstitutionsKing's College London
University of Cambridge
Academic advisorsHarold Jeffreys
Arthur Eddington
Doctoral studentsFelix Pirani
Roger Tayler
3rd Master of Churchill College, Cambridge
In office
1983–1990
Preceded bySir William Hawthorne
Succeeded byLord Broers

He is best known for developing the steady state model of the universe with Fred Hoyle and Thomas Gold as an alternative to the Big Bang theory. He contributed to the theory of general relativity, and was the first to analyze the inertial and gravitational interaction of negative mass and the first to explicate correctly the nature of gravitational waves. In his 1990 autobiography, Bondi regarded the 1962 work on gravitational waves as his "best scientific work".:79

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