- Crispin St. J. A. Nash-Williams
Crispin St. John Alvah Nash-Williams (
December 19 ,1932 —January 20 ,2001 ) was a British and Canadian mathematician. His research interest was in the field ofdiscrete mathematics , especiallygraph theory .Nash-Williams was born December 19, 1932, in
Cardiff, Wales ; his father was an archaeologist atUniversity College Cardiff , and his mother had studied classics atOxford University . After studying mathematics atCambridge University , earning the title of Senior Wrangler in 1953, he remained for his graduate studies at Cambridge, studying under the supervision ofShaun Wylie and David Rees. He continued his studies for a year atPrinceton University , withNorman Steenrod ; all three of Wylie, Rees, and Steenrod are listed as the supervisors of his Ph.D. thesis. He finished his thesis in 1958, but before doing so he returned to the UK as an assistant lecturer at theUniversity of Aberdeen . He kept his position at Aberdeen through ten years and two promotions until in 1967 he became one of the three faculty members in the newly formed Department of Combinatorics of theUniversity of Waterloo . In 1972 he returned to Aberdeen, as Professor of Pure Mathematics; in 1975 he moved to theUniversity of Reading , where he took the chair previously held byRichard Rado , who had been one of his thesis examiners. In 1996 he retired; he died on January 20, 2001, inAscot, England , where his brother was rector. [http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Biographies/Nash-Williams.html Nash-Williams biography] from the MacTutor history of mathematics archive.] citation|first=D. J. A.|last=Welsh|title=Obituary: Crispin St J. A. Nash-Williams (1932-2001)|journal=Bull. London Math. Soc.|volume=35|issue=6|year=2003|doi=10.1112/S0024609303002315|pages=829–844.]He was elected to the
Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1969. In 1994, the University of Waterloo gave him an honorary doctorate for his contributions tocombinatorics . A conference in his honor was held on his retirement in 1996, the proceedings of which were published as afestschrift . The 18th British Combinatorial Conference, held in Sussex in July 2001, was dedicated to his memory.Hilton [citation|first=A. J. W.|last=Hilton|title=Crispin St J A Nash-Williams|journal=Bull. Inst. Combin. Appl.|volume=33|year=2001|pages=11–12.] writes that "Themes running through his papers are
Hamiltonian cycle s, Eulerian graphs,spanning tree s, the Marriage problem, detachments, reconstruction, and infinite graphs."In his first papers Nash-William considered theknight's tour andrandom walk problems on infinite graphs; the latter paper included an important recurrence criterion for generalMarkov chain s, and was also the first to apply electrical network techniques of Rayleigh to random walks. His graduate thesis, which he finished in 1958, concerned generalizations ofEuler tour s to infinite graphs. Welsh writes that his subsequent work defining and characterizing thearboricity of graphs (discovered in parallel and independently byW. T. Tutte ) has "had a huge impact," in part because of its implications inmatroid theory. Nash-Williams also studiedk-edge-connected graph s, Hamiltonian cycles indense graph s, versions of thereconstruction conjecture for infinite graphs, and the theory ofquasi-order s.References
External links
*MathGenealogy|id=37104
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