Oswald Teichmüller | |
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Born | June 13, 1913 Nordhausen, German Empire |
Died | September 11, 1943 Dnieper, Soviet Union |
(aged 30)
Nationality | German |
Fields | Mathematics |
Alma mater | University of Göttingen |
Doctoral advisor | Helmut Hasse |
Known for | Teichmüller mapping Teichmüller space |
Oswald Teichmüller (June 18, 1913 – September 11, 1943) was a German mathematician who introduced quasiconformal mappings and differential geometric methods into complex analysis.
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Teichmüller was born in Nordhausen. He grew up in Sankt Andreasberg and earned his Abitur in 1931. In the same year he started studying mathematics at the University of Göttingen. Among his professors were Richard Courant, Hermann Weyl, Otto Neugebauer, Gustav Herglotz, and Edmund Landau. Teichmüller received his doctorate in 1935 under Helmut Hasse.
He joined the NSDAP in July 1931 and became a member of the Sturmabteilung in August 1931. In 1933 he organized the boycott of his Jewish professor Edmund Landau.[1] In 1936 and 1937 he attended lectures by Nevanlinna, who sympathized with the Third Reich, where he was a guest professor and, like Brouwer, was considered by the Nazis as "politically reliable" (Rudolf Heß was in charge of the assessment).[2] Under the influence of Nevanlinna Teichmüller specialized in geometric function theory. Upon personal authorisation from the Führer, he joined the Wehrmacht in 1939 and was killed fighting on the Eastern Front.
The theory of Teichmüller spaces (a moduli space theory for Riemann surfaces) was developed by Lars Ahlfors, Lipman Bers and others. The Teichmüller representative or Teichmüller character is a construction with p-adic numbers.
Much of Teichmüller's work was published in Deutsche Mathematik, a highly ideological journal founded by Ludwig Bieberbach that contained not only scholarly articles but also race propaganda. Because of the nature of the journal, his papers were hard to find in modern libraries before the publication of his collected works.