Guido Stampacchia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Guido Stampacchia in Tokyo, 1969
(photo from MFO)

Guido Stampacchia (March 26, 1922 - April 27, 1978) was a 20th-century Italian mathematician. [1]

Stampacchia was born in Naples, Italy from Emanuele Stampacchia and Giulia Campagnano. He obtained his high school certification from the Liceo-Ginnasio Giambattista Vico in Naples in classical subjects, although he showed stronger aptitude for mathematics and physics.[1]

In 1940 he was admitted to the Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa for undergraduate studies in pure mathematics. He was drafted in March 1943 but nevertheless managed to take examinations during the summer before joining the resistance movement against the Germans in the defense of Rome in September. He was discharged in June 1945.[1]

In 1944 he won a scholarship to the University of Naples which allowed him to continue his studies. In the 1945-1946 academic year he declined a specialization at the Scuola Normale in the Faculty of Sciences in favour of an assistant position at the Naval Institute at Naples. In 1949 he was appointed as assistant with tenure to the chair of mathematical analysis, and in 1951 he obtained his habilitation.

In 1952 won a national competition for the chair at the University of Palermo. He was nominated Professor on Probation at the University of Genoa later the same year and was promoted to full Professor in 1955.

He married fellow student Sara Naldini in October 1948. Children Mauro, Renata, Giulia, and Franca were born in 1949, 1951, 1955 and 1956 respectively.[1]

Stampacchia was active in research and teaching throughout his career. He made key contributions to a number of fields, including calculus of variation, variational inequalities and differential equations. In 1967 Stampacchia was elected President of the Unione Matematica Italiana. It was about this time that his research efforts shifted toward the emerging field of variational inequalities, which he modeled after boundary value problems for partial differential equations.[1][2] He was also director of the Istituto per le Applicazioni del Calcolo of Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche from December 1968[3] to 1974.

Stampacchia accepted the position of Professor Mathematical Analysis at the University of Rome in 1968 and returned to Pisa in 1970. He suffered a serious heart attack in early 1978 and died of heart arrest on April 27 of that year.[1]

The Stampacchia Medal, an international prize awarded every three years for contributions to the Calculus of Variations, has been established in 2003.

Works

  • with Sergio Campanato, Sulle maggiorazioni in Lp nella teoria delle equazioni ellittiche, Bollettino dell’Unione Matematica Italiana, Bologna, Zanichelli, 1965.
  • with Jaurès Cecconi, Lezioni di analisi matematica, I: Funzioni di una variabile, Napoli: Liguori editore, 1974, ISBN 88-207-0127-8
  • with Jaurès Cecconi, Lezioni di analisi matematica, II: Funzioni di più variabili, Napoli: Liguori, 1980, ISBN 88-207-1022-6
  • with Jaurès Cecconi and Livio Clemente Piccinini, Esercizi e problemi di analisi matematica, Napoli: Liguori, 1996, ISBN 88-207-0744-6, ISBN 978-88-207-0744-6
  • with Livio C. Piccinini and Giovanni Vidossich, Equazioni differenziali ordinarie in Rn, Liguori, 1978
  • with David Kinderlehrer: An introduction to variational inequalities and their applications, NY, Academic Press, 1980[4]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Silvia, Mazzone, (2005), "Guido Stampacchia", Variational analysis and applications, Nonconvex Optimization and Its Applications 79, New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 47–77, doi:10.1007/0-387-24276-7_5, ISBN 978-0-387-24209-5, MR 2159963, Zbl 1093.01539 
  2. Guido Stampacchia on The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive
  3. Silvia Mazzone, Guido Stampacchia
  4. Brezis, Haim (1982). "Review: An introduction to variational inequalities and their applications by David Kinderlehrer and Guido Stampacchia". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.) 7 (3): 622–627. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.