- Harold Davenport
Infobox_Scientist
name = Harold Davenport
image_width = 120px
caption = Harold Davenport in 1968
birth_date = birth date|1907|10|30|df=y
birth_place =Huncoat ,Lancashire ,England
death_date = death date and age|1969|6|9|1907|10|30|df=y
death_place =Cambridge ,England
residence =
nationality =
field =Mathematician
work_institution =University of Wales University College London University of Cambridge
alma_mater =Victoria University of Manchester University of Cambridge
doctoral_advisor =J. E. Littlewood
doctoral_students =John Horton Conway Alan Baker H. L. Montgomery
known_for =Number theory
prizes =
religion =
footnotes =Harold Davenport (
30 October 1907 –9 June 1969 ) was an English mathematician, known for his extensive work innumber theory .Early life
Born in
Huncoat ,Lancashire , he was educated atAccrington Grammar School, theUniversity of Manchester , where he graduated in 1927, andTrinity College, Cambridge . He became a research student ofJ. E. Littlewood , working on the question of the distribution ofquadratic residue s.First steps in research
The attack on the distribution question leads quickly to problems that are now seen to be special cases of those on
local zeta-function s, for the particular case of some specialhyperelliptic curve s such as:"Y"2 = "X"("X" − 1) ("X" − 2) ... ("X" − "k").Bounds for the zeroes of the local zeta-function immediately imply bounds for sums:Σ χ("x"("x" − 1) ("x" − 2) ... ("x" − "k")).where χ is theLegendre symbol "modulo" aprime number "p", and the sum is taken over acomplete set of residues mod "p".In the light of this connection it was appropriate that, with a Trinity research fellowship, Davenport in 1932–1933 spent time in
Marburg andGöttingen working withHelmut Hasse , an expert on the algebraic theory. This produced the work on theHasse-Davenport relation s forGauss sum s, and contact withHans Heilbronn , with whom Davenport would later collaborate. In fact, as Davenport later admitted, his inherent prejudices against algebraic methods ("what can you "do" with algebra?") probably limited the amount he learned, in particular in the "new"algebraic geometry and Artin/Noether approach toabstract algebra .Later career
He took an appointment at the University of Manchester in 1937, just at the time when
Louis Mordell had recruited émigrés from continental Europe to build an outstanding department. He moved into the areas ofdiophantine approximation andgeometry of numbers . These were fashionable, and complemented the technical expertise he had in theHardy-Littlewood circle method ; he was later, though, to let drop the comment that he wished he'd spent more time on theRiemann hypothesis .He was President of the
London Mathematical Society from 1957 to 1959. [cite web |url=http://www.lms.ac.uk/contact/list_of_presidents.html |title=Presidents of the London Mathematical Society |author=P.R. Cooper |accessdate=2007-02-22] After professorial positions at theUniversity of Wales andUniversity College London , he was appointed to theRouse Ball Chair of Mathematics in Cambridge in 1958. There he remained until his death, oflung cancer .Personal life
Davenport married Anne Lofthouse, whom he met at the University College of North Wales at Bangor, in 1944; they had two children, Richard and James. [cite web| last = O'Connor| first = John J.| coauthors = Robertson, Edmund F.| title = Harold Davenport| work = MacTutor History of Mathematics archive| publisher = University of St Andrews| url = http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/Davenport.html| accessdate = 2008-01-19] James is Hebron and Medlock Professor of Information Technology at the
University of Bath .Influence
From about 1950 he was the obvious leader of a "school", somewhat unusually in the context of British mathematics. The successor to the school of
mathematical analysis ofG. H. Hardy andJ. E. Littlewood , it was also more narrowly devoted to number theory, and indeed to its analytic side, as had flourished in the 1930s. This implied problem-solving, and hard-analysis methods. The outstanding works ofKlaus Roth andAlan Baker exemplify what this can do, in diophantine approximation. Two reported sayings, "the problems are there", and "I don't care how you get hold of the gadget, I just want to know how big or small it is", sum up the attitude, and could be transplanted today into any discussion ofcombinatorics . This concrete emphasis on problems stood in sharp contrast with the abstraction ofBourbaki , who were then active just across theEnglish Channel .Books
*"The Higher Arithmetic" (1952)
*"Analytic methods for Diophantine equations and Diophantine inequalities" (1962)
*"Multiplicative number theory "(1967)
*" The collected works of Harold Davenport" (1977) in four volumes, edited byB. J. Birch ,H. Halberstam ,C. A. Rogers Notes
References
*C.A. Rogers, B.J. Birch, H. Halberstam, D.A. Burgess, "Harold Davenport. 1907–1969", "Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society", Vol. 17, 1971, pp. 159–192.
External links
*MacTutor Biography|id=Davenport
*MathGenealogy|id=18241Persondata
NAME= Davenport, Harold
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= EnglishMathematician
DATE OF BIRTH=30 October 1907
PLACE OF BIRTH=Huncoat ,Lancashire ,England
DATE OF DEATH=9 June 1969
PLACE OF DEATH=Cambridge ,England
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