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Volodymyr Rvachov

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Rvachev Vladimir Logvinovich

Volodymyr Lohvynovych Rvachov (Ukrainian: Володимир Логвинович Рвачов; 21 October 1926, Chyhyryn – 26 April 2005, Kharkiv) was a Soviet and Ukrainian applied mathematician and engineering scientist.[1]

Early life and education

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Rvachov, the son of a teacher, began studying at the Kharkiv Polytechnic Institute in 1943, but the occupation of his home town by the German armed forces (Wehrmacht) forced him to flee and sign up for military service. After the war Rvachov was able to resume his studies at the University of Lviv, from where he graduated in 1952 and where, three years later, attained his first doctorate with a work on elastic theory. Thereafter, he was in charge of the Department of Higher Mathematics at the Berdiansk Pedagogic Institute until 1963. During this time, he completed his dissertation on three-dimensional contact problems in elastic theory at the Institute for Problems in Mechanics at the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union, and was appointed professor at the age of 35.

Career

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Rvachov was in charge of the Computational Mathematics Department at the Kharkiv Institute of Radioelectronics from 1963 to 1967,[2] and afterwards was head of the Department of Applied Mathematics & Computer Methods at the Institute for Problems in Mechanical Engineering at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine until he retired.

With his theory of R-functions, Rvachov in 1963 founded a mathematical theory in which mathematical logic was linked with classical methods of mathematics and modern cybernetics. He summarized his findings in a monograph (1982) which did not gain international recognition until Victor L. Shapiro’s English edition appeared six years later.[3]

With R-functions there appears the possibility of creating a constructive mathematical tool which incorporates the capabilities of classical continuous analysis and logic algebra. This allows one to overcome the main obstacle which hinders the use of variational methods when solving boundary problems in domains of complex shape with complex boundary conditions, this obstacle being connected with the construction of so-called coordinate sequences. In contrast to widely used methods of the network type (finite difference, finite and boundary elements), in the R-functions method all the geometric information present in the boundary value problem statement is reduced to analytical form, which allows one to search for a solution in the form of formulae called solution structures containing some indefinite functional components.[4]

Rvachov therefore provided computational mechanics with a new form of mathematical foundation with considerable heuristic potential.

Together with his students, he published more than 500 scientific papers and 17 monographs. He was elected a corresponding (1972) and later (1978) a full member of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine.[5] He was awarded numerous honors in recognition of his pioneering findings.[6]

Awards and honors

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Works

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  • Rvachov, V. L., 1982. Teoriya R-funktsii i nekotorye ee prilozheniya (theory of R-functions and some applications). Kyiv: Naukova Dumka, 1982 (in Russian).
  • Rvachov, V. L.; Sinekop, N. S., 1990. Metod R-funktsii v teorii uprugosti i plastichnosti (R-functions method in elasticity and plasticity theory). Kyiv: Naukova Dumka (in Russian).

References

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  1. ^ Kurrer, K.-E. (2018). Rvachev, Vladimir Logvinovich [The History of the Theory of Structures. Searching for Equilibrium]. Berlin: Wiley. p. 1055. ISBN 978-3-433-03229-9.
  2. ^ "В.Л.Рвачёв". 2010-06-10. Archived from the original on 2010-06-10. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
  3. ^ Shapiro, V. (1988). Theory of R-functions and applications: A primer [Tech. report CPA88-3]. Ithaca/New York: Sibley School of Mechanical Engineering.
  4. ^ Rvachev, V. L.; Sheiko, T. I.; Sinekop, N. S. (1995). R-functions in boundary value problems in mechanics. Applied Mechanics Reviews Vol. 48, No. 4. pp. 151–188.
  5. ^ Курпа, Л. (2006-10-23). "Ученый, Учитель, Человек". polytechnic.kpi.kharkov.ua. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
  6. ^ "Рвачев Владимир Логвинович | ХНУРЭ - Харьковский национальный университет радиоэлектроники". nure.ua. 7 March 2019. Retrieved 2020-12-11.