Michael Golomb
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael Golomb (born 1909) is an American mathematician and educator who is affiliated with Purdue University for over half a century. He was a student of Erhard Schmidt and Adolf Hammerstein,[1] and received his doctorate from the University of Berlin in 1933. However, as a Jew, he had to leave Germany shortly afterwards to avoid Nazi persecution. After a short period in Zagreb in the former Yugoslavia, Michael Golomb arrived in the U.S. in 1939, when he turned to applied mathematics. He was one of the first mathematicians to apply normed vector spaces in numerical analysis. He taught mathematics [1] at Purdue University from 1942 until his retirement in 1975, at times holding joint appointment with the Schools of Engineering. He continued to teach as Professor Emeritus.
In 1998 in Berlin, Michael Golomb was honored as part of a special exhibition entitled "Terror and Exile: Persecuted and expelled Berlin mathematicians in the time of the Nazi regime."[2] The exhibition was organized by the city of Berlin to coincide with the International Congress of Mathematicians there. His Erdős number is 1.[3]
[edit] References
- ^ Department of Mathematics, North Dakota State University. The Mathematics Genealogy Project. Retrieved on 2006-09-07.
- ^ Golomb, Michael. Terror and Exile and a Letter About it by Michael Golomb. Retrieved on 2006-09-07.
- ^ P. Erdős, M. Golomb (1955). "Functions which are symmetric about several points". Nieuw Arch. Wisk.: 13–19.