He was born in
Brooklyn, New York City on January 4, 1929, to Hyman and Anna (née Braun) Zabusky. After graduating from
Brooklyn Technical High School, he attended the
City College of New York, where he received a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering in 1951. Following that he went to the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, receiving his master's degree in electrical engineering in 1953. After two years, Zabusky decided to leave engineering and pursued a Ph.D. in theoretical physics at the
California Institute of Technology, which he received in 1959 with a thesis in the area of stability of flowing magnetized plasmas. In 1965, Zabusky and Kruskal pioneered the use of computer simulations to gain analytical insights into non-linear equations, and in the process, discovered the
soliton solutions to the
Korteweg–de Vries equation. The study of non-linear equations was enhanced by this discovery, opening up the door to analytical work on the integrability of the KdV equation and the equations of the KP hierarchy. But perhaps more important was the methodology. The use of computer simulations led Zabusky to an appreciation of the importance of appropriate visualization and quantification as a tool in analyzing fluid dynamical and wave systems. In 1990, he and Francois Bitz introduced the term
visiometrics. Zabusky worked at
Bell Laboratories from 1961 to 1976, after which he joined the faculty of the
University of Pittsburgh as a Professor of Mathematics. He organized the NATO Advanced Study Institute School of Nonlinear Mathematics and Physics, held in 1966 at the Max-Planck Institute of Physics in Munich, and in 1971, he received a Guggenheim Fellowship for his work in computational physics, which took him to Oxford University and the Weizmann Institute of Science during the following academic year. In 1988, he left Pittsburgh to become the State of New Jersey Professor of Computational Fluid Dynamics in the
Rutgers University in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. After receiving the Jacobs Chair in Applied Physics (2000–2005) at Rutgers University he became interested in science and art and organized the 4th international Science and Art Symposium
ScArt4. He retired from Rutgers as Emeritus Professor in 2006 and then was a visitor at the Dept. of Physics of Complex Systems at the
Weizmann Institute of Science. During his career, Zabusky was active in supporting
refusenik scientists in the
U.S.S.R., and served on the Advisory Board of the
Committee of Concerned Scientists. In 1983, while in the Soviet Union in conjunction with an invitation to an international scientific conference, he was expelled from the country for meeting with dissident Jewish scientists. ==References==