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{{short description|Chinese physicist and civil engineer (1916–2009)}}
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{{family name hatnote|[[Qian (surname)|Qian (Tsien)]]|lang=Chinese}}
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'''Qian Lingxi''' ({{zh|s=钱令希}}; 26 July 1916 – 20 April 2009), also known as '''Tsien Ling-hi''', was a Chinese [[civil engineer]] and physicist. An authority on engineering [[structural mechanics]] and [[computational mechanics]], he served as president of the [[Dalian University of Technology]] (DUT) and was a founding member of the [[Chinese Academy of Sciences]] (CAS). DUT's [[Lingxi Library]], opened in 2009, is named after him.
{{AFC comment|1=Please note that all articles need to show notability ''(See [[WP:NOTE]])'', and be verified by significant and reliable third party references ''(See [[WP:SOURCE]])'' which should be included by using inline citations ''(See [[WP:REFB]])'' - [[User:Happysailor|<span style="color:#8B0000">'''Happysailor'''</span>]] [[User talk:Happysailor|<sup><span style="color:Green"><i>(Talk)</i></span></sup>]] 13:22, 14 March 2018 (UTC)}}


== Early life and education ==
----
On 26 July 1916, Qian was born in the town of Hongsheng ({{lang|zh|鸿声镇}}, now Hongshan Subdistrict) outside the city of [[Wuxi]] in [[Jiangsu]], China.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://sail.dlut.edu.cn/qlxjslxj/qlxyssp.htm|title=钱令希院士生平|website=Dalian University of Technology|access-date=2019-01-30}}</ref><ref name=":2">{{Cite web|url=http://www.cas.cn/zt/rwzt/2009yldqx/qianlingxi/qlxjnwz/201003/t20100331_2810284.html|title=访钱令希院士|last=Zhang Yi 张轶|first=Yang Guosheng 杨国胜|date=2010-03-31|website=Chinese Academy of Sciences|access-date=2019-01-31}}</ref> His father, Qian Bogui ({{lang|zh|钱伯圭}}), was the teacher of the celebrated historian [[Qian Mu]] (Ch'ien Mu), and his older brother [[Qian Linzhao]] (1906–1999) was also a distinguished physicist and a founding member of the CAS.<ref name=":2" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://history.news.163.com/09/1128/14/5P7CENQ600011247_all.html|title=辉煌的钱氏家族: 近代钱家的人才"井喷"|date=2009-11-29|website=Netease|access-date=2019-01-30}}</ref>


After obtaining his bachelor's degree in civil engineering from Institut Technique Franc-Chinois de Shanghai (now part of the [[University of Shanghai for Science and Technology]]) in 1936, he won a [[Boxer Indemnity Scholarship]] to study at the [[Free University of Brussels (1834–1969)|Free University of Brussels]] in Belgium. He received the degree of ''{{lang|fr|ingénieur de construction civil avec grande distinction}}'' from the university in July 1938.<ref name=":0" />
Qian Lingxi (simplified Chinese: 钱令希; English:Tsien Ling-hi) (16 July 1916 – 20 April 2009) <ref>http://www.chinavitae.com/biography/Qian_Lingxi/bio</ref> <ref>http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_51fa18cc0100s0t1.html</ref> <ref>http://news.dlut.edu.cn/xwzx/dgxw/2010/12/xwzx.dgxw.1292485326d28094.html</ref> was a Chinese scientist and educator of engineering mechanics and computational mechanics.


[[File:3. FéûsâÅS+ĵëïF+¦ µêætáöt¬¦sè¢s¡ªµÿ»S+¦s+Ñt¿ïµ£ìsèí.jpg|thumb|Prof Lingxi Qian]]
Biography
A native of Hongsheng, Wuxi, Jiangsu, China. His father is Qian Bogui and his brother is Qian Linzhao (1906-1999), a famous Physics.
Prof. Qian obtained his bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from Institie Technique Franc-Chinois (the present Shanghai University of Technology) in 1936. On the same year, he was selected as a Boxer Indemnity student go to Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium. He received the degree of Ingenieur de construction civil avec grande distinction from the Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium in 1938. In autumn of 1938, he returned to China.
Prof. Qian had been a professor in the Department of Civil Engineering at both Yunnan University and Zhejiang University. From 1952 till 2009, he had been working in Dalian University of Technology (the previous Dalian Institute of Technology, taking up position of professor, Vice–President and President. He was select Member of the Chinese Academy of Science in 1955.


== Career ==
Prof. Qian devoted himself to the thorough research of engineering structural mechanics. He made important contributions in variation principles to limit analysis, computational mechanics and structural optimization. He has been exert in his endeavors to serve engineering and carrying forward the scientific and technical progress in different fields such as bridge, dam, harbor, ship, submarine, and mechanical engineering.
[[File:令希图书馆.jpg|thumb|The [[Lingxi Library]] of DUT, inaugurated in 2009, is named after Qian Lingxi.]]


He returned to China in the fall of 1938, in the midst of the [[Second Sino-Japanese War]]. He participated in the design of the Yibin-Kunming and Sichuan-Yunnan railways, worked in the Bridge Design and Engineering Department of the Ministry of Communications, and taught at [[Yunnan University]]. In November 1943, he became professor of civil engineering at [[Zhejiang University]], then exiled in [[Zunyi]], [[Guizhou]] because [[Zhejiang]] was under Japanese occupation.<ref name=":0" />
Prof. Qian published two textbooks on structural mechanics in 1951. They were widely adopted by Chinese universities and this significantly enhanced his reputation throughout the Chinese civil engineering community. In 1950, he published a paper entitled <Theory of Complimentary Energy> in the top Chinese Journal <Science in China>, which was widely credited with “starting a tidal wave of research on the variational principle in China”. This led his student Mr. H. C. Hu (later Professor Hu) to derive and publish in 1954 the elasticity variational theory with three independent variables, i.e. the well-known Hu-Washizu theory. During the early 1960s, Prof. Qian and his research assistant, Mr. W. X. Zhong, published two papers in <Science in China> and <Acta Mechanica Sinica> on the general variational theory of limit analysis and plasticity. Their research achievements on the stability of combined cone-cylinder shells were successfully used in the design of submarines and their work was recognized by the award of prestigious national prizes. Over the next decade, Qian designed and guided the construction of the principal part of the first modern Chinese petroleum port located in Dalian, which has played a very important role in Chinese oil supply right up to the present day. In 1973, Qian instigated a movement within CAS to encourage research on structural optimization design, its theory and methodology. This call was taken up enthusiastically by the Chinese mechanics community and until the early 1980s, Qian and his team in DUT, including Professor W. X. Zhong and Professor G. D. Cheng, published many innovative papers and developed a powerful computer system for structural optimization design known as DDDU. The system was used successfully in many important engineering projects and its value was recognized by awards from the Chinese Government on more than one occasion.

After the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949, Qian became Chair of the Department of Civil Engineering of Zhejiang University in 1950. In January 1952, after repeated invitations from [[Qu Bochuan]], President of Dalian Institute of Technology (now [[Dalian University of Technology]] or DUT), Qian agreed to move to [[Dalian]] to teach at DUT. He spent the rest of his career there, and succeeded Qu as the second president of the university.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=http://cpc.people.com.cn/GB/64093/87393/9163907.html|title=钱令希院士逝世|date=2009-04-21|website=People's Daily|access-date=2019-01-30}}</ref> In 1955, he became one of the founding members of the [[Chinese Academy of Sciences]].<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.chinavitae.com/biography/Qian_Lingxi/bio|title=Biography of Qian Lingxi|website=China Vitae|access-date=2019-01-30}}</ref>

During the [[Cultural Revolution]], top experts including Qian Lingxi and [[Huang Xuhua]] were denounced as "reactionary academic authorities" and dismissed from their posts.<ref name="Cheung2009">{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/fortifyingchinas00cheu|url-access=registration|title=Fortifying China: The Struggle to Build a Modern Defense Economy|last=Cheung|first=Tai Ming|publisher=Cornell University Press|year=2009|isbn=978-0-8014-4692-4|pages=[https://archive.org/details/fortifyingchinas00cheu/page/48 48]}}</ref> When China's [[nuclear submarine]] project needed Qian's help to analyze its structural designs, its leader Chen Youming had to appeal directly to Premier [[Zhou Enlai]] to make him available to the strategic program.<ref name="LewisXue1996">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GH5FgdqxTboC&pg=PA61|title=China's Strategic Seapower: The Politics of Force Modernization in the Nuclear Age|author1=John Wilson Lewis|author2=Litai Xue|publisher=Stanford University Press|year=1996|isbn=978-0-8047-2804-1|page=61}}</ref>

[[File:Prof Qian.jpg|thumb]]
== Contributions ==

=== Research ===
Qian devoted himself to research in engineering structural mechanics. He made important contributions in variation principles to limit analysis, computational mechanics and structural optimization.<ref name=":0" />

In 1950, Qian published his influential paper "Theory of Complementary Energy" in the journal ''Science in China''. It led his student [[Hu Haichang]] to derive the [[Hu–Washizu principle]] in 1954.<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal|last1=Zhang|first1=Hong-wu|last2=Lin|first2=Jia-Hao|date=July 2009|title=Mourn for the loss of Professor L. X. Qian|url=https://www.cimne.com/iacm/News/Expressions%2025.pdf|journal=IACM Expressions|issue=25|pages=41}}</ref>

In the early 1960s, Qian and his student [[Zhong Wanxie]] published two papers in ''Science in China'' and ''Acta Mechanica Sinica'', on the "general variational theory of limit analysis and plasticity". Their research was used in [[submarine]] design and was awarded national prizes.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3" />

In the 1970s, Qian designed the main part of China's first modern petroleum port in [[Dalian]], [[Liaoning]]. In the early 1980s, Qian, together with [[Zhong Wanxie]] and [[Cheng Gengdong]], developed DDDU, an advanced computer system for structural design. DDDU was used in many major engineering projects.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3" />

=== Education ===
In 1951, Qian wrote two [[structural mechanics]] textbooks, which were widely used in Chinese universities and educated a generation of Chinese civil engineers.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3" />

Qian is celebrated in China as a "[[Bo Le]]" for scientists. Six of his former students have become academicians: [[Pan Jiazheng]], [[Hu Haichang]], [[Cheng Gengdong]], [[Zhong Wanxie]], [[Qiu Dahong]], and [[Yang Jinzong]].<ref name=":4" /> Pan Jiazheng, who was Qian's student at Zhejiang University, almost dropped out of college because of poverty. When Qian learned about his situation, he paid for Pan's tuition and living expenses out of his own pocket until his graduation. Pan would later become one of the chief engineers of the [[Three Gorges Dam]].<ref name=":4">{{Cite web|url=http://story.kedo.gov.cn/c/2016-07-29/846526.shtml|title="伯乐院士"钱令希的人格魅力|last=Wang Gaoyan 王高岩|date=2016-07-29|website=Kedo.gov.cn|access-date=2019-01-31}}</ref>

=== Major publications ===
[1] Qian Lingxi, {{ font color | green | Hyperstatic Structure}}, China Science Book and Instrument Company, Shanghai, 1951.

[2] Qian Lingxi, {{ font color | green |Statically Determinate Structure}}, China Science Book Instrument Company, Shanghai, 1952.

[3] Б. Н. Жемочкин, {{ font color | green |On the Calculation of Lattice Cofferdams}}, Translated by Qian Lingxi. Transportation Ministry of Inland Waterway Technology Research Group, 1953.

[4] Э. Ф. Gorhuangwei, Т. В. Ender. {{ font color | green |Calculation of Dry Dock Floor on Compressible Foundation (B. A. Florin's method)}}, Translated by Qian Lingxi and Gao Guofan. People's Communications Press, Beijing, 1955.


Prof Qian's major work and published books are following:
[1] Qian Lingxi, Hyperstatic Structure, China Science Book and Instrument Company, Shanghai, 1951.
[2] Qian Lingxi, Statically Determinate Structure, China Science Book Instrument Company, Shanghai, 1952.
[3] Б. Н. Жемочкин, On the Calculation of Lattice Cofferdams, Translated by Qian Lingxi. Transportation Ministry of Inland Waterway Technology Research Group, 1953.
[4] Э. Ф. Gorhuangwei, Т. В. Ender. Calculation of Dry Dock Floor on Compressible Foundation (B. A. Florin's method), Translated by Qian Lingxi and Gao Guofan. People's Communications Press, Beijing, 1955.
[5] (Based on the lecture notes prepared by Qian Lingxi) Compiled by the General Administration of Navigation Engineering, Ministry of Communications of the People's Republic of China, Port
[5] (Based on the lecture notes prepared by Qian Lingxi) Compiled by the General Administration of Navigation Engineering, Ministry of Communications of the People's Republic of China, Port
Building, Vol 1, Wharf Design, People's Communications Publishing House, Beijing, 1955.
Building, Vol 1, {{ font color | green |Wharf Design}}, People's Communications Publishing House, Beijing, 1955.

[6] Н. Х. Arugiu Nieyang, Several Problems in Creep Theory, Translated by Wu Ruifeng, Lu Kuangzhou, Fang Xiaoshu, Zhao Deyong, Qian Lingxi, and etc., Beijing Science Press, Beijing, 1961.
[6] Н. Х. Arugiu Nieyang, {{ font color | green |Several Problems in Creep Theory}}, Translated by Wu Ruifeng, Lu Kuangzhou, Fang Xiaoshu, Zhao Deyong, Qian Lingxi, etc., Beijing Science Press, Beijing, 1961.
[7] Qian Lingxi and Zhong Wanxie, On Limit Analysis in Solid Mechanics and Suggest a General Variational Principle, The Science and Technology Commission of the Republic of China, Beijing, 1964.

[8] Qian Lingxi, editor in chief, Selected Papers on Structural Optimization, Guanghua Publishing House, Beijing, 1979.
[7] Qian Lingxi and Zhong Wanxie, {{ font color | green |On Limit Analysis in Solid Mechanics and Suggest a General Variational Principle}}, The Science and Technology Commission of the Republic of China, Beijing, 1964.
[9] Qian Lingxi, Optimized Design of Engineering Structure (including drawings and errata), Printed by Dalian Institute of Technology, Dalian, 1981.

[10] Qian Lingxi, editor in chief, Proceedings of the 1980 National Conference on Computational Mechanics, Peking University Press, Beijing, 1981.
[8] Qian Lingxi, editor in chief, {{ font color | green |Selected Papers on Structural Optimization}}, Guanghua Publishing House, Beijing, 1979.
[11] W. J. Krefeld and W. G. Bowman, Nuclear Plate (Structural Element), Translated by Qian Lingxi, Science Press, Beijing, 1982.

[12] Qian Lingxi, Selected Papers of O. C. Zienkiewicz on Finite Element Method, China Academic Press, Beijing, 1982.
[9] Qian Lingxi, {{ font color | green |Optimized Design of Engineering Structure}} (including drawings and errata), Printed by Dalian Institute of Technology, Dalian, 1981.
[13] Prepared by the Steel Bridge Design Group of the Engineering Mechanics Department of Dalian Institute of Technology, reviewed and updated by Qian Lingxi, All-Welded Hollow Truss Steel Bridge, People's Communications Press, Beijing, 1982.

[14] Qian Lingxi, Optimal Design of Engineering Structure, Water Conservancy and Electric Power Press, Beijing, 1983.
[15] Qian Lingxi, Statically Indeterminate and Statically Determinate Structure, Science Press, Beijing, 2011.
[10] Qian Lingxi, editor in chief, {{ font color | green |Proceedings of the 1980 National Conference on Computational Mechanics}}, Peking University Press, Beijing, 1981.

[16] Qian Lingxi, Optimal Design of Engineering Structure, Science Press, Beijing, 2011.
[11] W. J. Krefeld and W. G. Bowman, {{ font color | green |Nuclear Plate (Structural Element)}}, Translated by Qian Lingxi, Science Press, Beijing, 1982.

[12] Qian Lingxi, {{ font color | green |Selected Papers of O. C. Zienkiewicz on Finite Element Method}}, China Academic Press, Beijing, 1982.

[13] Prepared by the Steel Bridge Design Group of the Engineering Mechanics Department of Dalian Institute of Technology, reviewed and updated by Qian Lingxi, {{ font color | green |All-Welded Hollow Truss Steel Bridge}}, People's Communications Press, Beijing, 1982.

[14] Qian Lingxi, {{ font color | green |Optimal Design of Engineering Structure}}, Water Conservancy and Electric Power Press, Beijing, 1983.

[15] Qian Lingxi, {{ font color | green |Statically Indeterminate and Statically Determinate Structure}}, Science Press, Beijing, 2011.

[16] Qian Lingxi, {{ font color | green |Optimal Design of Engineering Structure}}, Science Press, Beijing, 2011.

== Death and legacy ==
Qian died on 20 April 2009 in Dalian, at the age of 92.<ref name=":1" /> Top [[Chinese Communist Party]] (CCP) leaders, including CCP General Secretary [[Hu Jintao]], former CCP General Secretary [[Jiang Zemin]], Premier [[Wen Jiabao]], and former Premier [[Li Peng]], paid their respects at his funeral.<ref name=":3" />

In the same year, DUT inaugurated its new library and named it [[Lingxi Library]] in his memory; it is one of the largest university libraries in [[Northeast China]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.lib.lnnu.edu.cn/zhuanlan/xinguan/tong.htm|title=全国最美50座大学图书馆|website=Liaoning Normal University|access-date=2019-01-31}}</ref>

== References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}

{{Founding members of the Chinese Academy of Sciences}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Qian, Lingxi}}
{{AFC submission|||ts=20180616180005|u=Zbw2011|ns=118}}
[[Category:1916 births]]
[[Category:2009 deaths]]
[[Category:Boxer Indemnity Scholarship recipients]]
[[Category:Chinese civil engineers]]
[[Category:Chinese expatriates in Belgium]]
[[Category:Academic staff of Dalian University of Technology]]
[[Category:Educators from Wuxi]]
[[Category:Engineers from Jiangsu]]
[[Category:Free University of Brussels (1834–1969) alumni]]
[[Category:Members of the Chinese Academy of Sciences]]
[[Category:Physicists from Jiangsu]]
[[Category:Scientists from Wuxi]]
[[Category:University of Shanghai for Science and Technology alumni]]
[[Category:Academic staff of Yunnan University]]
[[Category:Academic staff of Zhejiang University]]

Latest revision as of 17:42, 7 May 2024

Qian Lingxi (Chinese: 钱令希; 26 July 1916 – 20 April 2009), also known as Tsien Ling-hi, was a Chinese civil engineer and physicist. An authority on engineering structural mechanics and computational mechanics, he served as president of the Dalian University of Technology (DUT) and was a founding member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). DUT's Lingxi Library, opened in 2009, is named after him.

Early life and education

[edit]

On 26 July 1916, Qian was born in the town of Hongsheng (鸿声镇, now Hongshan Subdistrict) outside the city of Wuxi in Jiangsu, China.[1][2] His father, Qian Bogui (钱伯圭), was the teacher of the celebrated historian Qian Mu (Ch'ien Mu), and his older brother Qian Linzhao (1906–1999) was also a distinguished physicist and a founding member of the CAS.[2][3]

After obtaining his bachelor's degree in civil engineering from Institut Technique Franc-Chinois de Shanghai (now part of the University of Shanghai for Science and Technology) in 1936, he won a Boxer Indemnity Scholarship to study at the Free University of Brussels in Belgium. He received the degree of ingénieur de construction civil avec grande distinction from the university in July 1938.[1]

Prof Lingxi Qian

Career

[edit]
The Lingxi Library of DUT, inaugurated in 2009, is named after Qian Lingxi.

He returned to China in the fall of 1938, in the midst of the Second Sino-Japanese War. He participated in the design of the Yibin-Kunming and Sichuan-Yunnan railways, worked in the Bridge Design and Engineering Department of the Ministry of Communications, and taught at Yunnan University. In November 1943, he became professor of civil engineering at Zhejiang University, then exiled in Zunyi, Guizhou because Zhejiang was under Japanese occupation.[1]

After the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949, Qian became Chair of the Department of Civil Engineering of Zhejiang University in 1950. In January 1952, after repeated invitations from Qu Bochuan, President of Dalian Institute of Technology (now Dalian University of Technology or DUT), Qian agreed to move to Dalian to teach at DUT. He spent the rest of his career there, and succeeded Qu as the second president of the university.[1][4] In 1955, he became one of the founding members of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.[1][4][5]

During the Cultural Revolution, top experts including Qian Lingxi and Huang Xuhua were denounced as "reactionary academic authorities" and dismissed from their posts.[6] When China's nuclear submarine project needed Qian's help to analyze its structural designs, its leader Chen Youming had to appeal directly to Premier Zhou Enlai to make him available to the strategic program.[7]

Contributions

[edit]

Research

[edit]

Qian devoted himself to research in engineering structural mechanics. He made important contributions in variation principles to limit analysis, computational mechanics and structural optimization.[1]

In 1950, Qian published his influential paper "Theory of Complementary Energy" in the journal Science in China. It led his student Hu Haichang to derive the Hu–Washizu principle in 1954.[8]

In the early 1960s, Qian and his student Zhong Wanxie published two papers in Science in China and Acta Mechanica Sinica, on the "general variational theory of limit analysis and plasticity". Their research was used in submarine design and was awarded national prizes.[1][8]

In the 1970s, Qian designed the main part of China's first modern petroleum port in Dalian, Liaoning. In the early 1980s, Qian, together with Zhong Wanxie and Cheng Gengdong, developed DDDU, an advanced computer system for structural design. DDDU was used in many major engineering projects.[1][8]

Education

[edit]

In 1951, Qian wrote two structural mechanics textbooks, which were widely used in Chinese universities and educated a generation of Chinese civil engineers.[1][8]

Qian is celebrated in China as a "Bo Le" for scientists. Six of his former students have become academicians: Pan Jiazheng, Hu Haichang, Cheng Gengdong, Zhong Wanxie, Qiu Dahong, and Yang Jinzong.[9] Pan Jiazheng, who was Qian's student at Zhejiang University, almost dropped out of college because of poverty. When Qian learned about his situation, he paid for Pan's tuition and living expenses out of his own pocket until his graduation. Pan would later become one of the chief engineers of the Three Gorges Dam.[9]

Major publications

[edit]

[1] Qian Lingxi, Hyperstatic Structure, China Science Book and Instrument Company, Shanghai, 1951.

[2] Qian Lingxi, Statically Determinate Structure, China Science Book Instrument Company, Shanghai, 1952.

[3] Б. Н. Жемочкин, On the Calculation of Lattice Cofferdams, Translated by Qian Lingxi. Transportation Ministry of Inland Waterway Technology Research Group, 1953.

[4] Э. Ф. Gorhuangwei, Т. В. Ender. Calculation of Dry Dock Floor on Compressible Foundation (B. A. Florin's method), Translated by Qian Lingxi and Gao Guofan. People's Communications Press, Beijing, 1955.

[5] (Based on the lecture notes prepared by Qian Lingxi) Compiled by the General Administration of Navigation Engineering, Ministry of Communications of the People's Republic of China, Port Building, Vol 1, Wharf Design, People's Communications Publishing House, Beijing, 1955.

[6] Н. Х. Arugiu Nieyang, Several Problems in Creep Theory, Translated by Wu Ruifeng, Lu Kuangzhou, Fang Xiaoshu, Zhao Deyong, Qian Lingxi, etc., Beijing Science Press, Beijing, 1961.

[7] Qian Lingxi and Zhong Wanxie, On Limit Analysis in Solid Mechanics and Suggest a General Variational Principle, The Science and Technology Commission of the Republic of China, Beijing, 1964.

[8] Qian Lingxi, editor in chief, Selected Papers on Structural Optimization, Guanghua Publishing House, Beijing, 1979.

[9] Qian Lingxi, Optimized Design of Engineering Structure (including drawings and errata), Printed by Dalian Institute of Technology, Dalian, 1981.

[10] Qian Lingxi, editor in chief, Proceedings of the 1980 National Conference on Computational Mechanics, Peking University Press, Beijing, 1981.

[11] W. J. Krefeld and W. G. Bowman, Nuclear Plate (Structural Element), Translated by Qian Lingxi, Science Press, Beijing, 1982.

[12] Qian Lingxi, Selected Papers of O. C. Zienkiewicz on Finite Element Method, China Academic Press, Beijing, 1982.

[13] Prepared by the Steel Bridge Design Group of the Engineering Mechanics Department of Dalian Institute of Technology, reviewed and updated by Qian Lingxi, All-Welded Hollow Truss Steel Bridge, People's Communications Press, Beijing, 1982.

[14] Qian Lingxi, Optimal Design of Engineering Structure, Water Conservancy and Electric Power Press, Beijing, 1983.

[15] Qian Lingxi, Statically Indeterminate and Statically Determinate Structure, Science Press, Beijing, 2011.

[16] Qian Lingxi, Optimal Design of Engineering Structure, Science Press, Beijing, 2011.

Death and legacy

[edit]

Qian died on 20 April 2009 in Dalian, at the age of 92.[4] Top Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leaders, including CCP General Secretary Hu Jintao, former CCP General Secretary Jiang Zemin, Premier Wen Jiabao, and former Premier Li Peng, paid their respects at his funeral.[8]

In the same year, DUT inaugurated its new library and named it Lingxi Library in his memory; it is one of the largest university libraries in Northeast China.[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "钱令希院士生平". Dalian University of Technology. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  2. ^ a b Zhang Yi 张轶, Yang Guosheng 杨国胜 (2010-03-31). "访钱令希院士". Chinese Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  3. ^ "辉煌的钱氏家族: 近代钱家的人才"井喷"". Netease. 2009-11-29. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  4. ^ a b c "钱令希院士逝世". People's Daily. 2009-04-21. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  5. ^ "Biography of Qian Lingxi". China Vitae. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  6. ^ Cheung, Tai Ming (2009). Fortifying China: The Struggle to Build a Modern Defense Economy. Cornell University Press. pp. 48. ISBN 978-0-8014-4692-4.
  7. ^ John Wilson Lewis; Litai Xue (1996). China's Strategic Seapower: The Politics of Force Modernization in the Nuclear Age. Stanford University Press. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-8047-2804-1.
  8. ^ a b c d e Zhang, Hong-wu; Lin, Jia-Hao (July 2009). "Mourn for the loss of Professor L. X. Qian" (PDF). IACM Expressions (25): 41.
  9. ^ a b Wang Gaoyan 王高岩 (2016-07-29). ""伯乐院士"钱令希的人格魅力". Kedo.gov.cn. Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  10. ^ "全国最美50座大学图书馆". Liaoning Normal University. Retrieved 2019-01-31.