Michael F. Shlesinger
Michael F. Shlesinger is a physicist notable for his work in the area of nonlinear dynamics. He is the co-founder of the journal Fractals. His pioneering work in statistical predictions and descriptions of random and deterministic processes has influenced the physics of amorphous solids and glasses, classical mechanics, and biophysics. He is known as a proponent of fractal time and is also known for his work on fractal stochastic processes related to areas such as disordered materials and turbulence.
Education
In 1970, Shlesinger obtained his BS degree in physics and mathematics from State University of New York at Stony Brook, and obtained his MA in 1972 from the University of Rochester. In 1975, he obtained his PhD from the University of Rochester under Elliott Waters Montroll for a thesis titled ''A Stochastic Theory of Anomalous Transient Photocurrents in Certain Xerographic Films and of the 1/f Noise in Neural Membrane.''
Career
Initially he worked at the University of Maryland, College Park. In 1983, he joined Office of Naval Research and started their nonlinear dynamics program in 1984. He went on to head their physics division, before being named ONR's chief scientist for nonlinear science. His contributions to nonlinear dynamics and statistical physics include the publication of over 200 papers, editorship of over 20 books, and the organization of over 30 conferences. In 2008, he took up the Kinnear Chair in Physics at the US Naval Academy, Annapolis, United States. In 2021, he published An Unbounded Experience in Random Walks with Applications.
Honors
Shlesinger was elected as a fellow of the American Physical Society in 1993. In 2004, he received the Presidential Rank Award. In 2006, he received ONR's Saalfeld Award for outstanding lifetime achievement. In 2008, he was honored with a festschrift to mark his 60th birthday, entitled 25 Years of Nonlinear Dynamics at ONR, based on a conference held on Amelia Island, Florida, July 20–22, 2008.
Name
His middle name is the single initial "F"—he does not have a full middle name; another famous example of this is the middle initial of Harry S. Truman.