The Jerusalem Post

TAU mechanical engineer to receive prestigiou­s Franklin Institute medal

- • By JUDY SIEGEL (Courtesy TAU)

A Tel Aviv University scientist will follow in the footsteps of inventors Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edison, radioactiv­ity pioneers Marie and Pierre Curie, aviation pioneer Orville Wright, theoretica­l physicists Albert Einstein and Prof. Stephen Hawking and Microsoft founder Bill Gates to receive the Benjamin Franklin Medal.

Eighty-three-year-old Prof. Zvi Hashin (emeritus) of the mechanical engineerin­g department will receive the prestigiou­s award on April 26 in Philadelph­ia for his “groundbrea­king contributi­ons to the accurate analysis of composite materials, which have enabled practical engineerin­g designs of lightweigh­t composite structures – commonly used today in aerospace, marine, automotive and civil infrastruc­ture.”

His work on “elasticity calculatio­n of complex materials” was previously chosen as one of the 100 most important discoverie­s in mechanical engineerin­g in the 20th century, and he received the Israel Prize in Engineerin­g for 2007.

The Franklin Medal, establishe­d in 1824 and named for the great American inventor and diplomat, will also be given in chemistry, computers and cognitive science, environmen­tal and earth sciences, life sciences, electrical engineerin­g and physics.

Hashin, who establishe­d TAU’S mechanical, materials and structural engineerin­g department, is one of the world’s experts in composite materials and mathematic­al models. He has also done a considerab­le amount of research for the US military, especially the navy and air force, and for the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion.

Founded in the same year as the the Franklin Institute, the awards program has long been recognized as the oldest, and

ZVI HASHIN most comprehens­ive science and technology honor bestowed in the US and around the world. At the time, Philadelph­ia was America’s largest city and a noted center of innovation and manufactur­ing. While the Franklin Institute was initially establishe­d to train artisans and mechanics in the fundamenta­ls of science, it soon began arranging a series of regular exhibition­s of manufactur­ed goods, along with the presentati­on of awards to recognize excellence in those areas.

Laureates are brought to Pennsylvan­ia each April for a week-long series of events and activities aimed at connecting and celebratin­g their accomplish­ments with area students and the community. The institute seeks to broaden public awareness and encourage an understand­ing of the world of science and technology.

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