Enzo Tonti (30 October 1935 – 10 June 2021[1]) was an Italian physicist and mathematician, known for his contributions to engineering and mathematical physics.

Enzo Tonti
Tonti c. 2007
Born30 October 1935
Milan, Italy
Died21 October 2021(2021-10-21) (aged 85)
Trieste, Italy
Alma materUniversity of Milan
Known forCell Method
Tonti Cells
Tonti Diagrams
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
Mathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Trieste

Life

edit

Enzo Tonti was born in Milan. He attended a fine arts high school. He graduated in Mathematics and Physics at the University of Milan in 1961.[2] He began work there in 1962 as a research assistant in the field of mathematical physics. In 1976, he accepted a professorship at the Engineering Faculty of the University of Trieste. After retirement, he was nominated professor emeritus. He married in 1962 and had three children (two daughters and one son).

 
Tonti diagram of the electromagnetic field
 
Two-dimensional dual cell complexes according to Enzo Tonti
 
Three-dimensional dual cell complexes according to Enzo Tonti

Selected publications

edit

Journal articles

edit
  • Tonti E. A direct discrete formulation of field laws: The cell method. CMES- Computer Modeling in Engineering and Sciences. 2001 Jan 1;2(2):237-58.
  • Tonti E. Finite formulation of the electromagnetic field. Progress in electromagnetics research, 2001. 32, pp. 1–44.[1]
  • Tonti E. Finite formulation of the electromagnetic field.IEEE Transactions on Magnetics. 2002 Aug 7;38(2):333-6. [2]
  • Tonti E. The reason for analogies between physical theories. Applied Mathematical Modelling. 1976 Jun 1;1(1):37-50 [3]
  • Tonti E. Variational formulation for every nonlinear problem. International Journal of Engineering Science. 1984 Jan 1;22(11-12):1343-71. [4]

Books

edit
  • Tonti, Enzo. The Mathematical Structure of Classical and Relativistic Physics A General Classification Diagram. Springer. 2013. ISBN 9781461474227

References

edit
  1. ^ "Tonti Enzo". Il Piccolo (in Italian).
  2. ^ "CV | Discrete Physics" (in Italian). Retrieved 13 May 2019.
edit