- Raphaël Salem
Raphaël Salem(
November 7 ,1898 inSaloniki ,Ottoman Empire (nowThessaloniki ,Greece ) –June 20 ,1963 inParis ,France ), was a Greek-Sephardicmathematician after whom are named theSalem number s and whose widow founded theSalem Prize .Biography
Raphaël Salem was born in
Saloniki to Emmanuel and Fortunée Salem. His father was a well known lawyer who dealt with international problems while his mother was Salem. Raphaël was brought up in aJewish family who followed the traditions of their ancestors. At age 15 the family moved toFrance and Salem attended theLycée Condorcet for two years. Believing that he would follow in father's footsteps, Salem entered the Law Faculty of theUniversity of Paris . His interests, though, were not in law but rather in mathematics and engineering. Soon there after Salem started taking mathematics courses withHadamard all the while continuing his studies for law. In 1919 he graduated from Licencié et lauréat and received his law degree. He then began working for a doctorate in law but quickly decided to change direction to science, which he had been studying for years in parallel to his work in law.He received his Licencié ès sciences from the
Sorbonne and then worked for a degree in engineering. In 1921 he received the degree of Ingénieur des Arts et Manufactures from the École Centrale. Having completed his studies in law, science and engineering Salem then went into banking and started working forBanque de Paris et des Pays-Bas in 1921. In his free time he worked onFourier series, a topic which interested him throughout his life.In the spring of 1939 Salem collaborated with the brilliant young Polish mathematician
Józef Marcinkiewicz , where he continued to write mathematics papers while still working for the bank. With a deteriorating political situation inFrance and the beginning ofWorld War II in September 1939, Salem was called up for military duty. He was attached to the Deuxième Bureau of the General Staff of the French Army. He was sent toEngland to assist the Head of the Franco-British Coordination Committee but he was demobilised in June 1940. Salem left England in the autumn of 1940 and emigrated to theUnited States where he settled inCambridge ,Massachusetts . In 1941, he was appointed as a lecturer in mathematics at the MIT, were he was rapidly promoted at MIT where he became an assistant professor in and an associate professor. In 1958 he was appointed as Professor at theSorbonne and lived in Paris until his death. After Salem's death his wife established an international prize for outstanding contributions to Fourier series.Personal
In 1923 Salem got married to a young woman named Adriana and the couple had three children: a daughter and two sons. His father died in
Paris in 1940 while his mother, his sister, his sister's husband, and his sister's son, were all arrested and deported to aNazis concentration camp where they all died. Salem's older son survived the war and he enlisted in the free French Forces and took part inAllied landings in the South of France in 1944. By this time his surviving family had managed to escape from France and they relocated toCanada .Aside from his interest of mathematics, Salem also loved music and playing the violin, preferring to play in quartets. He was also interested in the arts and literature. He also enjoyed sports especially skiing and horse riding.
References
* Article by: "J. J. O'Connor" and "E. F. Robertson"
Links
*
Salem number
*Salem Prize External links
* [http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Mathematicians/Salem.html Salem biography at St.Andrews University]
* [http://www.univ-rouen.fr/LMRS Laboratoire de Mathématiques Raphaël Salem at Université de Rouen, France]
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