BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH: JOHN D. ANDERSON, JR.
Dr. John Anderson, Jr. was born in
Dr. Anderson has published ten books: Gasdynamic
Lasers: An
Introduction, Academic Press (1976), and under
McGraw-Hill, Introduction to Flight, 1st Edition (1978), 2nd Edition,
(1985), 3rd Edition (1989), 4th Edition (2000),5th Edition (2005), Modern Compressible Flow, 1st Edition
(1982), 2nd Edition (1990), 3rd Edition (2002), Fundamentals of
Aerodynamics, 1st Edition (1984), 2nd Edition (1991), 3rd Edition (2001), Hypersonic
and High Temperature Gas Dynamics (1989), Computational Fluid Dynamics:
The Basics with Applications (1995), A History of Aerodynamics and Its
Impact on Flying Machines, Cambridge University Press, 1997, Aircraft
Performance and Design, McGraw-Hill, 1999, The Airplane: A History of Its
Technology, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2002, and Inventing
Flight: The Wright Brothers and Their Predecessors, Johns Hopkins
University Press, 2004. He is the author
of over 120 papers in radiative gasdynamics, re-entry aerothermodynamics,
gasdynamic and chemical lasers, computational fluid dynamics, applied
aerodynamics, hypersonic flow, and the history of aeronautics. Dr. Anderson is in Who's Who in
Washington Academy of
Sciences, and a member of Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Tau, Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Eta Sigma,
the American Society for Engineering Education, the History of Science Society,
and the Society for the History of Technology.
In 1988, he was elected as Vice President of the AIAA for
Education. In 1989, he was awarded the John
Leland Atwood Award jointly by the American Society for Engineering Education
and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics "for the
lasting influence of his recent contributions to aerospace engineering
education." In 1995, he was awarded the AIAA Pendray Aerospace Literature
Award "for writing undergraduate and graduate textbooks in aerospace
engineering which have received worldwide acclaim for their readability and
clarity of presentation, including historical content." In 1996, he was
elected Vice President of the AIAA for Publications. He has recently been honored by the AIAA with
its 2000 von Karman Lectureship in Astronautics, and with its History Book
Award for 2002 for a History of Aerodynamics. In 2002, he was awarded
the position of Honorary Fellow of the AIAA, the Institute’s highest award.
Dr. Anderson is active and known for
his professional and educational activities both nationally and
internationally. He has given over 40
short courses to the major aerospace companies, the Air Force Academy, the
government, and in