Ippolit S. Gromeka
Ippolit Stepanovich Gromeka (or Hippolyte Stepanovich Gromeka) was a 19th century Russian scientist who made significant contributions to the science of fluid mechanics. BiographyIppolit was born on 27 January in 1851, in Berdychiv to Stepan Stepanovich Gromeka, a well-known publicist and a governor (1867–1875) of Siedlce and Yekaterina Fyodorovna Shcherbatska.[1] He grew up in Siedlce and also earned a gold medal in the Siedlce high school. He completed his Bachelors degree from the Imperial Moscow University in 1873 and worked as a teacher in the university for two years. He then worked as a teacher in Moscow High School until 1879, and in Belsk high school from 1879. In 1879, he also completed his Master's degree with a dissertation on capillary phenomena.[2] In 1880, he became an assistant professor at the Kazan University. In 1881, he obtained his PhD with a dissertation on Some cases of the motion of an incompressible fluid. He became a professor in 1882. In the winter of 1888-1889, Gromeka fell from a sleigh during hunting with a severe bruise in his chest. Due to his injury, he died on 13 October 1889 in Kutaisi at the age of only 38. One of his brother, Mikhail Stepanovich Gromeka, was a well known literary critic, who died in 1883. ResearchDuring his short research career, just over than 10 years, Gromeka has produced many important contributions to the field of fluid mechanics through 11 works, starting from his Master's thesis on capillary phenomena and his last work in 1889 on the effect of temperature distribution on sound waves.[3] He provided an original and modern description of the capillarity phenomena, settling for the first time the discrepancy that was prevalent between Young's and Laplace's theories. He pioneered the studies on Beltrami flows in his PhD thesis in 1882[4] and because of it, he is referred as the father of the helical flows.[1] He also studied unsteady flows in tubes, wave motion in elastic tubes and others.[5] His scientific works were published in Russian in 1952.[6] A special issue in the journal Fluids in honour of Gromeka was produced in 2024.[7] Published worksGromeka's published works are[1]
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