- Solomon Lefschetz
Infobox Scientist
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name =Solomon Lefschetz
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birth_date = September 3, 1884
birth_place =Moscow ,Russia
death_date = October 5, 1972
death_place =
residence = USA
citizenship =
nationality = Russian
ethnicity = Jewish
fields = algebraic topology
workplaces =University of Nebraska University of Kansas Princeton University
alma_mater =École Centrale Paris
doctoral_advisor =William Edward Story ,Clark University
academic_advisors =
doctoral_students =Edward Begle Richard Bellman Felix Browder Clifford Dowker Ralph Fox Ralph Gomory John McCarthyRobert Prim Paul A. Smith Norman Steenrod Clifford Truesdell Albert W. Tucker John Tukey Henry Wallman Shaun Wylie
notable_students =
known_for =Lefschetz fixed point theorem , Picard-Lefschetz formula
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awards =Bôcher Memorial Prize
footnotes =Solomon Lefschetz (
3 September 1884 –5 October 1972 ) was an Americanmathematician who did fundamental work onalgebraic topology , its applications toalgebraic geometry , and the theory of non-linearordinary differential equation s.Life
He was born in
Moscow into aJew ish family (his parents were Turkish citizens) who moved shortly after that toParis . He was educated there inengineering at theÉcole Centrale Paris , but emigrated to the USA in 1905.He was badly injured in an industrial accident in 1907, losing both hands. He moved towards mathematics, receiving a Ph.D. in algebraic geometry from
Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts in 1911. He then took positions inUniversity of Nebraska andUniversity of Kansas , moving toPrinceton University in 1924, where he was soon given a permanent position. He remained there until 1953.In the application of topology to algebraic geometry, he followed the work of
Charles Émile Picard , whom he had heard lecture in Paris at theÉcole Centrale . He proved theorems on the topology ofhyperplane sections of algebraic varieties, which provide a basic inductive tool (these are now seen as allied toMorse theory , though aLefschetz pencil of hyperplane sections is a more subtle system than a Morse function because hyperplanes intersect each other). ThePicard-Lefschetz formula in the theory ofvanishing cycle s is a basic tool relating the degeneration of families of varieties with 'loss' of topology, tomonodromy . His book "L'analysis situs et la géométrie algébrique" from 1924, though opaque foundationally given the current technical state ofhomology theory , was in the long term very influential (one could say that it was one of the sources for the eventual proof of theWeil conjectures , throughSGA7 ). In 1924 he was awarded theBôcher Memorial Prize for his work in mathematical analysis.The
Lefschetz fixed point theorem , now a basic result of topology, he developed in papers from 1923 to 1927, initially formanifold s. Later, with the rise ofcohomology theory in the 1930s, he contributed to theintersection number approach (that is, in cohomological terms, the ring structure) via thecup product and duality on manifolds. His work on topology was summed up in his monograph " [http://www.ams.org/online_bks/coll27/ Algebraic Topology] " (1942). From 1944 he worked ondifferential equation s.He was editor of "the
Annals of Mathematics " from 1928 to 1958. During this time, "Annals" became an increasingly well-known and respected journal, and Lefschetz played an important role in this. The rise of "Annals", in turn, stimulated American mathematics.Fact|date=August 2008Lefschetz came out of retirement in 1958, because of the launch of
Sputnik , to augment the mathematical component ofGlenn L. Martin Company ’s Research Institute for Advanced Study (RIAS) in Baltimore, Maryland. His team became the world's largest group of mathematicians devoted to research in nonlinear differential equations. [Allen, K. N. (1988, January). Undaunted genius. "Clark News", 11(1), p. 9.] The RIAS mathematics group stimulated the growth of nonlinear differential equations through conferences and publications. It left RIAS in 1964 to form the Lefschetz Center for Dynamical Systems atBrown University , Providence, Rhode Island. [http://www.dam.brown.edu/lcds/about.php]ee also
*
Lefschetz hyperplane theorem
*Lefschetz duality References
External links
*MacTutor Biography|id=Lefschetz
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* [http://libweb.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/finding_aids/mathoral/pmcxrota.htm "Fine Hall in its golden age: Remembrances of Princeton in the early fifties" by Gian-Carlo Rota.] Contains a lengthy section on Lefschetz at Princeton.
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