Percy John Daniell
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Percy John Daniell (9 January 1889 – 25 May 1946) was a pure and applied mathematician. In a series of papers published between 1918 and 1928, he developed and expanded a generalized theory of integration and differentiation, which is today known as the Daniell scheme.
Daniell was born in Valparaiso, Chile. His family relocated to England in 1895. Daniell completed his university education at Cambridge and Göttingen. He held university positions at the Rice Institute, Houston, Texas, and later at the University of Sheffield. Daniell also advised the British Ministry of Supply during the second world war. The strain of work during the war took a heavy toll on his health. He passed away on 25 May 1946, after having collapsed at his home a few weeks earlier.
[edit] References
- Stewart, C.A. (1947), "P. J. Daniell", J. London Math. Soc. s1-22: 75–80.
- Daniell, Percy John (1918), "A general form of integral", Annals of Mathematics 19: 279–94.
- –––––– (1919a), "Integrals in an infinite number of dimensions", Annals of Mathematics 20: 281–88.
- –––––– (1919b), "Functions of limited variation in an infinite number of dimensions", Annals of Mathematics 21: 30–38.
- –––––– (1920), "Further properties of the general integral", Annals of Mathematics 21: 203–20.
- –––––– (1921), "Integral products and probability", American Journal of Mathematics 43: 143–62.
- Shilov, G. E., and Gurevich, B. L. (1978), Integral, Measure, and Derivative: A Unified Approach, Richard A. Silverman, trans., Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-63519-8