Yves Pomeau
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Yves Pomeau, born in 1942, is a French mathematician and physicist, emeritus research director at the
CNRS The French National Centre for Scientific Research (french: link=no, Centre national de la recherche scientifique, CNRS) is the French state research organisation and is the largest fundamental science agency in Europe. In 2016, it employed 31,637 ...
and corresponding member of the
French Academy of sciences The French Academy of Sciences (French: ''Académie des sciences'') is a learned society, founded in 1666 by Louis XIV of France, Louis XIV at the suggestion of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, to encourage and protect the spirit of French Scientific me ...
. He was one of the founders of th
Laboratoire de Physique Statistique, École Normale Supérieure, Paris
He is the son of
René Pomeau René Pomeau (20 February 1917 in Beautiran – 26 February 2000 in Clamart) was an eminent French scholar of eighteenth-century French literature generally recognised as one of the most expert authority on Voltaire by the time of his death in 20 ...
.


Career

Yves Pomeau did his state thesis in plasma physics, almost without any adviser, at the University of Orsay-France in 1970. After his thesis, he spent a year as a postdoc with Ilya Prigogine in Brussels. He was a researcher at the CNRS from 1965 to 2006, ending his career as DR0 in the Physics Department of the Ecole Normale Supérieure (ENS) (Statistical Physics Laboratory) in 2006. He was a lecturer in physics at the École Polytechnique for two years (1982–1984), then a scientific expert with the Direction générale de l'armement until January 2007. He was Professor, with tenure, part-time at the Department of Mathematics, University of Arizona, from 1990 to 2008. He was visiting scientist at Schlumberger–Doll Laboratories ( Connecticut, USA) from 1983 to 1984. He was a visiting professor at MIT in Applied Mathematics in 1986 and in Physics at UC San Diego in 1993. He was Ulam Scholar at CNLS, Los Alamos National Lab, in 2007–2008. He has written 3 books, and published around 400 scientific articles. "Yves Pomeau occupies a central and unique place in modern statistical physics. His work has had a profound influence in several areas of physics, and in particular on the mechanics of continuous media. His work, nourished by the history of scientific laws, is imaginative and profound. Yves Pomeau combines a deep understanding of physical phenomena with varied and elegant mathematical descriptions. Yves Pomeau is one of the most recognized French theorists at the interface of physics and mechanics, and his pioneering work has opened up many avenues of research and has been a continuous source of inspiration for several generations of young experimental physicists and theorists worldwide."


Education

* École normale supérieure, 1961–1965. * Licence (1962). * DEA in Plasma Physics, 1964. * Aggregation of Physics 1965. * State thesis in plasma physics, University of Orsay, 1970.


Research

In his thesis he showed that in a dense fluid the interactions are different from what they are at equilibrium and propagate through hydrodynamic modes, which leads to the divergence of transport coefficients in 2 spatial dimensions. This aroused his interest in fluid mechanics, and in the transition to turbulence. Together with Paul Manneville they discovered a new mode of transition to turbulence, the transition by temporal Intermittency, which was confirmed by numerous experimental observations and CFD simulations. This is the so-called
Pomeau–Manneville scenario In the theory of dynamical systems (or turbulent flow), the Pomeau–Manneville scenario is the transition to chaos (turbulence) due to intermittency. Named after Yves Pomeau Yves Pomeau, born in 1942, is a French mathematician and physicist, em ...
, associated with the Pomeau-Manneville maps In papers published in 1973 and 1976, Jean Hardy, Pomeau and Olivier de Pazzis introduced the first lattice Boltzmann model, which is called the HPP model after the authors. Generalizing ideas from his thesis, together with Uriel Frisch and
Brosl Hasslacher Brosl Hasslacher (May 13, 1941 – November 11, 2005) was a theoretical physicist. Brosl Hasslacher obtained a bachelor's in physics from Harvard University in 1962. He did his Ph.D. with D.Z. Freeman and Yang Chen-Ning, C.N. Yang at the State Uni ...
, they found a very simplified microscopic fluid model (FHP model) which allows to simulate very efficiently the complex movements of a real fluid. He was a pioneer of lattice Boltzmann methods and played a historical role in the
timeline of computational physics The following timeline starts with the invention of the modern computer in the late interwar period. 1930s * John Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford Berry create the first electronic non-programmable, digital computing device, the Atanasoff–Ber ...
. Reflecting on the situation of the transition to turbulence in parallel flows, he showed that turbulence is caused by a contagion mechanism, and not by local instability. Front can be static or mobile depending on the conditions of the system, and the causes of the motion can be the variation of a free energy, where the most energetically favorable state invades the less favorable one. The consequence is that this transition belongs to the class of directed percolation phenomena in statistical physics, which has also been amply confirmed by experimental and numerical studies. In dynamical systems theory, the structure and length of the attractors of a network corresponds to the dynamic phase of the network. The stability of Boolean network depends on the connections of their nodes. A Boolean network can exhibit stable, critical or chaotic behavior. This phenomenon is governed by a critical value of the average number of connections of nodes (K_), and can be characterized by the Hamming distance as distance measure. If p_=p=const. for every node, the transition between the stable and chaotic range depends on p .
Bernard Derrida Bernard Derrida (; born 1952) is a French theoretical physicist. He is best known for his work in statistical mechanics, and is the eponym of ''Derrida plots'', an analytical technique for characterising differences between Boolean networks. Biogr ...
and Yves Pomeau proved that, the critical value of the average number of connections is K_=1/
p(1-p) P, or p, is the sixteenth letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. Its name in English is ''pee'' (pronounced ), plural ''pees''. History The ...
. A droplet of nonwetting viscous liquid moves on an inclined plane by rolling along it. Together with
Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan FRS is a scientist of Indian origin, and is currently the Lola England de Valpine Professor of Applied Mathematics, Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and Physics at Harvard University. His work centers around und ...
, he gave a scaling law for the uniform speed of such a droplet. With Christiane Normand, and
Manuel García Velarde Manuel García Velarde (; born 14 September 1941) is a Spanish physicist and university professor, currently a member of the Academia Europaea, the Royal Academy of Doctors of Spain and the European Academy of Sciences. Velarde has worked in Amer ...
, he studied convective instability. Apart from simple situations, capillarity remains an area where fundamental questions remain. He showed that the discrepancies appearing in the hydrodynamics of the moving contact line on a solid surface could only be eliminated by taking into account the evaporation/condensation near this line. Capillary forces are almost always insignificant in solid mechanics. Nevertheless, with Serge Mora and collaborators they have shown theoretically and experimentally that soft gel filaments are subject to Rayleigh-Plateau instability, an instability never observed before for a solid. In collaboration with his former PhD student Basile Audoly and
Henri Berestycki Henri Berestycki (born 25 March 1951, in Paris) is a French mathematician who obtained his PhD from Université Paris VI – Université Pierre et Marie Curie in 1975. His Dissertation was titled ''Contributions à l'étude des problèmes elliptiq ...
, he studied the speed of the propagation of a reaction front in a fast steady flow with a given structure in space. With Basile Audoly and Martine Ben Amar, Pomeau developed a theory of large deformations of elastic plates which led them to introduce the concept of "''d''-cone", that is, a geometrical cone preserving the overall developability of the surface, an idea now taken up by the solid mechanics community. The theory of superconductivity is based on the idea of the formation of pairs of electrons that become more or less bosons undergoing Bose-Einstein condensation. This pair formation would explain the halving of the flux quantum in a superconducting loop. Together with Len Pismen and Sergio Rica they have shown that, going back to Onsager's idea explaining the quantification of the circulation in fundamental quantum states, it is not necessary to use the notion of electron pairs to understand this halving of the circulation quantum. He also analyzed the onset of BEC from the point of view of kinetic theory. Whereas the kinetic equation for a dilute Bose gas had been known for many years, the way it can describe what happens when the gas is cooled down to reach temperature below the temperature of transition. At this temperature the gas gets a macroscopic component in the quantum ground state, as had been predicted by Einstein long ago. Pomeau and collaborators showed that the solution of the kinetic equation becomes singular at zero energies and we did also find how the density of the condensate grows with time after the transition. This makes a rather unique example where a phase transition can be understood mathematically in the dynamical sense. They also derived the kinetic equation for the Bogoliubov excitations of Bose-Einstein condensates, where they found three collisional processes. Before the surge of interest in super-solids started by Moses Chan experiments, they had shown in an early simulation that a slightly modified NLS equation yields a fair representation of super-solids. With
Alan C. Newell Alan C. Newell (born 5 November 1941 in Dublin) is an Irish/American mathematician and Regents Professor at the University of Arizona. He was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1976 and in 2004 the John von Neumann Lecture The John von Neu ...
, he studied turbulent crystals in macroscopic systems. From his more recent work we must distinguish those concerning a phenomenon typically out of equilibrium, that of the emission of photons by an atom maintained in an excited state by an intense field that creates Rabi oscillations. The theory of this phenomenon requires a precise consideration of the statistical concepts of quantum mechanics in a theory satisfying the fundamental constraints of such a theory. With Martine Le Berre and
Jean Ginibre Jean Ginibre (4 March 1938 — 26 March 2020) was a French mathematical physicist. He is known for his contributions to random matrix theory (see circular law), statistical mechanics (see FKG inequality, Ginibre inequality), and partial diffe ...
they showed that the good theory was that of a Kolmogorov equation based on the existence of a small parameter, the ratio of the photon emission rate to the atomic frequency itself.


Known for

*
Timeline of computational physics The following timeline starts with the invention of the modern computer in the late interwar period. 1930s * John Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford Berry create the first electronic non-programmable, digital computing device, the Atanasoff–Ber ...
* Lattice Boltzmann Models * Intermittency *
Pomeau–Manneville scenario In the theory of dynamical systems (or turbulent flow), the Pomeau–Manneville scenario is the transition to chaos (turbulence) due to intermittency. Named after Yves Pomeau Yves Pomeau, born in 1942, is a French mathematician and physicist, em ...
* Pomeau-Manneville maps * The stability of Boolean network *
Front Front may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Films * ''The Front'' (1943 film), a 1943 Soviet drama film * '' The Front'', 1976 film Music *The Front (band), an American rock band signed to Columbia Records and active in the 1980s and e ...
*
Lattice gas automaton Lattice gas automata (LGCA), or lattice gas cellular automata, are a type of cellular automaton used to simulate fluid flows, pioneered by HPP model, Hardy–Pomeau–de Pazzis and Uriel Frisch, Frisch–Brosl Hasslacher, Hasslacher–Yves Pomeau, ...
*
Logistic map The logistic map is a polynomial mapping (equivalently, recurrence relation) of degree 2, often referred to as an archetypal example of how complex, chaotic behaviour can arise from very simple non-linear dynamical equations. The map was popular ...
* Stellar pulsation * Hardy-Pomeau-Pazzis (HPP) model * The physics of ice skating *
Lorenz system The Lorenz system is a system of ordinary differential equations first studied by mathematician and meteorologist Edward Lorenz. It is notable for having chaotic solutions for certain parameter values and initial conditions. In particular, the ...
* Saffman-Taylor Fingers * Hénon-Pomeau attractor


Prizes and awards

* FPS Paul Langevin Award in 1981. * FPS Jean Ricard Award in 1985. * Perronnet–Bettancourt Prize (1993) awarded by the Spanish government for collaborative research between France and Spain. * Chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur since 1991. * Elected corresponding member of the French Academy of sciences in 1987 (Mechanical and Computer Sciences). * Boltzmann Medal (2016)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Pomeau, Yves 1942 births French mathematicians French physicists Plasma physics Members of the French Academy of Sciences Living people Academic staff of the École Normale Supérieure Research directors of the French National Centre for Scientific Research