Cesar Sciammarella

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Cesar Sciammarella
Born (1924-08-22) August 22, 1924 (age 100)
Alma materUniversity of Buenos Aires
Illinois Institute of Technology
OccupationScientist
Known forExperimental Mechanics
Holographic interferometry
Moire deflectometry
TitleEmeritus Professor, Department of Mechanical, Materials and Aerospace Engineering Illinois Institute of Technology
SpouseEsther Sciammarella
ChildrenEduardo Sciammarella Federico Sciammarella
WebsiteGeneral Stress Optics

Cesar Augusto Sciammarella (born August 22, 1924) is an Argentine civil engineer who made significant contributions to the field of experimental mechanics.[1] In the last decade, he has extended his pioneering developments in moiré,[2] holography, and speckle interferometry[3] methodologies down to the nanometer level.[4] These efforts have enabled optics to be applied beyond the classical Rayleigh limit, reaching the nanometer range.

His research is widely used for 3D reconstruction and stress and strain analysis. In his Doctoral Thesis on the moiré method, he extended the Continuum Mechanics model originally developed by Dantu to large deformations. He developed fundamental equations on the properties of moiré fringes and sign conventions. This was an analysis of a non-elastic problem with the moiré method. Dr Sciammarella generalised the methods that measure displacements using Fourier analysis in the process of formation of the fringe images. He proved formally that the orders could be represented by real numbers instead of integers.[5] In 1966, he presented a full model of the moiré fringes as phase modulated signals and provided a method to get displacements and strains for moiré and photo-elastic fringes. He introduced in the literature the Fourier method as a tool for fringe pattern analysis. His model is still used as a standard model in the fringe analysis method.[6]

Cesar Sciammarella received his diploma in Civil Engineering from the University of Buenos Aires in July 1950. After graduation, he worked as a professional engineer in different industries, including the Director of the Materials Testing Laboratories in the Metallurgy and Materials Division of the Atomic Energy Commission of Argentina. Later, he was invited by Dr A.J. Durelli to come to the US to get a PhD degree. He received his PhD from the Illinois Institute of Technology in June 1960. Upon graduation, he returned to the Argentine Atomic Energy Commission.

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