Morgan Ward

Morgan Ward (1901–1963) was an American mathematician, a professor of mathematics at the California Institute of Technology.[1]

Ward received his Ph.D. from Caltech in 1928, with a dissertation entitled The Foundations of General Arithmetic; his advisor was Eric Temple Bell.[2] He became a research fellow at Caltech, and then in 1929 a member of the faculty; he remained at Caltech until his death in 1963.[3] Among his doctoral students was Robert P. Dilworth, who also became a Caltech professor.[2] Ward is the academic ancestor of over 500 mathematicians and computer scientists through Dilworth and another of his students, Donald Darling.[2]

Ward's research interests included the study of recurrence relations and the divisibility properties of their solutions, diophantine equations including Euler's sum of powers conjecture and equations between monomials, abstract algebra, lattice theory and residuated lattices, functional equations and functional iteration, and numerical analysis.[4] He also worked with the National Science Foundation on the reform of the elementary school mathematics curriculum,[3] and with Clarence Ethel Hardgrove he wrote the textbook Modern Elementary Mathematics (Addison-Wesley, 1962).

Ward's works are collected in the Caltech library.[3] A symposium in his memory was held at Caltech on November 21-22, 1963.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Prof. Ward of Caltech Dies at 61", Los Angeles Times, June 27, 1963 .
  2. ^ a b c Morgan Ward at the Mathematics Genealogy Project..
  3. ^ a b c Collection Profile: Morgan Ward (1901–1963), Caltech Library, retrieved 2010-09-12.
  4. ^ a b Lehmer, D. H., "The mathematical work of Morgan Ward", Mathematics of Computation 61 (203): 307–311, doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-1993-1182245-3 .