- Philip Franklin
Infobox Scientist
name = Philip Franklin
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birth_date =October 5 ,1898
birth_place = New York
death_date =January 27 ,1965
death_place = Belmont,Massachusetts
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doctoral_advisor =Oswald Veblen
doctoral_students =Alan Perlis
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footnotes =Philip Franklin (
October 5 ,1898 in New YorkJanuary 27 ,1965 in Belmont,Massachusetts ) was an American mathematician and professor whose work was primarily focused in analysis.Dr. Franklin received a
B.S. in 1918 fromCity College of New York (who later awarded him its Townsend Harris Medal for the alumnus who achieved notable postgraduate distinction). He received his M.A. in 1920 andPh.D. in 1921 both fromPrinceton University . His dissertation, "The Four Color Problem", was supervised byOswald Veblen . After teaching for one year at Princeton and two years at Harvard (as theBenjamin Peirce Instructor), Franklin joined the MIT Department of Mathematics, where he stayed until his 1964 retirement.In 1922, Franklin gave the first proof that all planar graphs with at most 25 vertices can be four-colored.
In 1928, Franklin gave the first description of an
orthonormal basis for "L"²( [0,1] ) consisting ofcontinuous function s (now known as "Franklin's system").Franklin also worked with Jay W. Forrester on
Project Whirlwind at theOffice of Naval Research (ONR).Franklin was editor of the Journal of Mathematics and Physics from 1929.
Franklin was married to
Norbert Wiener 's sister Constance.
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