Georg Hamel
Georg Hamel | |
---|---|
Born | 12 September 1877 |
Died | 4 October 1954 (aged 77) |
Institutions | Technical University of Berlin |
Thesis | On the geometries in which the degrees are the shortest (1901) |
Doctoral advisor | David Hilbert |
Doctoral students |
Michael Sadowsky Wilhelm Cauer Richard von Mises |
Known for | Hamel basis |
Georg Karl Wilhelm Hamel (12 September 1877 – 4 October 1954) was a German mathematician with interests in mechanics, the foundations of mathematics and function theory.[1]
Hamel was born in Düren, Rhenish Prussia. He studied at Aachen, Berlin, Göttingen, and Karlsruhe. His doctoral adviser was David Hilbert.[2] He taught at Brünn in 1905, Aachen in 1912, and at the Technical University of Berlin in 1919. In 1927, Hamel studied the size of the key space for the Kryha encryption device. He became a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences in 1938 and the Bavarian Academy of Sciences in 1953. He died in Landshut, Bavaria.
See also
References
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.