In a 1948 paper dealing with relativistic shock waves, Taub introduced a relativistic generalization of the
Rankine-Hugoniot jump conditions across a
shock, which is now known as the
Taub Adiabat. He also introduced the
Taub–NUT space in general relativity. In 1948, Abe Taub went to the
University of Illinois as the chief mathematician associated with a project to build a computer based on von Neumann's plans. The computer, called
ORDVAC, was completed in 1952 and delivered to the
Aberdeen Proving Ground. A second copy of the computer,
ILLIAC I, remained at Illinois and was the prototype for several other computers. Taub was head of the
Digital Computer Laboratory at Illinois from 1961 until 1964, when he moved to the University of California, Berkeley, as director of the Computer Center (1964–68) with a joint appointment in the department of mathematics. He was a full-time professor of mathematics from 1967 to 1978, when he retired as professor emeritus. == Death ==