Gustav de Vries
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Gustav de Vries (1866-1934) was a Dutch mathematician, who is best remembered for his work on the Korteweg–de Vries equation with Diederik Korteweg. He was born on January 22, 1866 in Amsterdam, and studied at the University of Amsterdam with the distinguished physical chemist Johannes van der Waals and with the mathematician Diederik Korteweg. While doing his doctoral research De Vries supported himself by teaching at the Royal Military Academy in Breda (1892-1893) and at the "cadettenschool" te Alkmaar (1893-1894). Under Korteweg's supervision de Vries completed his doctoral dissertation: Bijdrage tot de kennis der lange golven, Acad. proefschrift, Universiteit van Amsterdam, 1894, 95 pp, Loosjes, Haarlem. The following year Korteweg and de Vries published the research paper On the Change of Form of Long Waves advancing in a Rectangular Canal and on a New Type of Long Stationary Waves, Philosophical Magazine, 5th series, 39, 1895, pp. 422--443. In 1894 de Vries took employment as a high school teacher at the "HBS en Handelsschool" in Haarlem, where he remained until his retirement in 1931. He died in Haarlem on December 16, 1934.
[edit] Further reading
- Bastiaan Willink, The collaboration between Korteweg and de Vries — An enquiry into personalities, History of Physics, 16 p., October 2007 (lanl.arXiv.org).
[edit] External links
- O'Connor, John J. & Robertson, Edmund F., “Gustav de Vries”, MacTutor History of Mathematics archive
- Gustav de Vries at the Mathematics Genealogy Project