Marc Thomas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marc Phillip Thomas (born in 1950) is a professor of Computer science and Mathematics, current chair and a system administrator of Computer Science department at CSU Bakersfield.
His successful research projects include the resolution of the commutative Singer-Wermer conjecture and construction of a non-standard closed ideal in a certain radical Banach algebra of power series and their quotients.
Contents |
[edit] Exposition
- The Relationship between C, ANSI C, and C++
- The Unix Operating System (from Encyclopedia of Information Systems)
- The PC Organism
- OS/2 FAQ
- Remarks on Network Security
- Typical Hacking Attempts
- Typical Buffer Overflow Hack Attempts
- Moronic Hacking
- Efficient Hacking
[edit] Research
- Elements in the radical of a Banach algebra obeying the unbounded Kleinecke-Shirokov conjecture
- Local Power Series Quotients of Commutative Banach and Frechet Algebras
- Prime-like Elements and Semi-direct Products in Commutative Banach Algebras
- Closed ideals of $l^{1}(\omega_{n})$ when $\{\omega_{n}\}$ is star-shaped.
- Principal Ideals and Semi-direct Products in Commutative Banach Algebras
- Single-Element Properties in Commutative Radical Banach Algebras:a Classification Scheme
- Reduction of discontinuity for derivations on Frechet algebras
- Radical Banach Algebrasand Quasinilpotent Weighted Shift Operators.
- The image of a derivation is contained in the radical (Ann. of Math)
- Primitive ideals and derivations on noncommutative Banach algebras.
- Algebra homomorphisms and the functional calculus
[edit] Education
- Degree: Ph.D. (Mathematics), UC Berkeley, 1976