![]() |
|
|
#1200 | ||
|
Feb 2017
Nowhere
4,673 Posts |
Quote:
Morto il grande matematico Louis Nirenberg Quote:
|
||
|
|
|
|
|
#1201 | |
|
Nov 2003
22·5·373 Posts |
Quote:
not yet reported it.... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1202 |
|
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
@above - One sign of major contributions to functional analysis is if one has an inequality named after oneself ... in this case allow me to present the Sobolev-Nirenberg-Gagliardo inequality (pick your preferred permutation of the last names), which featured muchly in an edition of the Advanced Topics in PDEs graduate course I took back in the day at UMichigan, that particular semester was taught by Michael Weinstein, whose special topic was nonlinear waves.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1203 |
|
Feb 2017
Nowhere
467310 Posts |
Even the best-known contemporary mathematicians are not likely to be as well-known as a prominent sports figure. And the news of their passing is unlikely to be as widely publicized.
Also, there is a difference between dying an untimely, violent death at a fairly young age, and dying of natural causes in old age, after one's active career is over. But last year did indeed see some giants pass from the scene. Atiyah. Shimura. Tate. And late 2018 saw the passing of Swinnerton-Dyer. I can only think of one famous mathematician offhand who also excelled in sports: Niels Bohr's younger brother Harald was both a fine mathematician and an excellent football (soccer) player. He was on the Danish team in the 1908 Olympics, which won the Silver Medal. In mathematics, he originated the theory of "almost-periodic functions," and his name is immortalized in the Bohr-Landau Theorem. |
|
|
|
|
|
#1204 | |
|
Nov 2003
22×5×373 Posts |
Quote:
dedicated to mathematics. Especially number theory. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1205 | |
|
"Tilman Neumann"
Jan 2016
Germany
2·3·7·11 Posts |
Quote:
That happened ~1 day after he was overtaken by LeBron James in the NBA all time scorer stats. https://www.basketball-reference.com...001250PHI.html https://www.basketball-reference.com...ts_career.html Last fiddled with by Till on 2020-01-27 at 20:57 Reason: better english |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1206 | |
|
Feb 2017
Nowhere
124116 Posts |
Quote:
Still, I agree, it is perhaps a bit hard to understand why the passing of great mathematicians went nearly unremarked by a community as involved in mathematics as the denizens of this Forum. Perhaps reports just didn't get to web sites most of us usually frequent. And I for one very seldom check just to see whether any mathematicians have recently died. Last fiddled with by Dr Sardonicus on 2020-01-27 at 21:22 Reason: Rewording |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1207 |
|
"Carlos Pinho"
Oct 2011
Milton Keynes, UK
3·17·97 Posts |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1208 |
|
6809 > 6502
"""""""""""""""""""
Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
984210 Posts |
On Sunday I saw someone (that I know fairly well) that personally knew several people on that helicopter. The person that I know has interacted with KB's daughter and seen KB doing normal dad things. Also they had another friend and their mother on that flight. This person that I know lost a parent and a close cousin in the last year or so. While it is not likely that they could have been on that flight, it is not out of the realm of possibility.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1209 | |
|
Nov 2003
22·5·373 Posts |
Quote:
I don't check at all. But I do get emails from colleagues. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#1210 | |
|
Bemusing Prompter
"Danny"
Dec 2002
California
1001010111102 Posts |
Quote:
And when Hans Riesel passed away, there was no mention at all. Only the American Mathematical Society posted a short blurb about it on their website a few months later. |
|
|
|
|