A glimpse at Hilbert space operators : Paul R. Halmos in memoriam
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A glimpse at Hilbert space operators : Paul R. Halmos in memoriam
(Operator theory : advances and applications, v. 207)
Birkhäuser, c2010
- : hbk
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Library, Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Kyoto University数研
: hbkAXL||1||2200017836431
Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Paul Richard Halmos, who lived a life of unbounded devotion to mathematics and to the mathematical community, died at the age of 90 on October 2, 2006. This volume is a memorial to Paul by operator theorists he inspired. Paul'sinitial research,beginning with his 1938Ph.D. thesis at the University of Illinois under Joseph Doob, was in probability, ergodic theory, and measure theory. A shift occurred in the 1950s when Paul's interest in foundations led him to invent a subject he termed algebraic logic, resulting in a succession of papers on that subject appearing between 1954 and 1961, and the book Algebraic Logic, published in 1962. Paul's ?rst two papers in pure operator theory appeared in 1950. After 1960 Paul's research focused on Hilbert space operators, a subject he viewed as enc- passing ?nite-dimensional linear algebra. Beyond his research, Paul contributed to mathematics and to its community in manifold ways: as a renowned expositor, as an innovative teacher, as a tireless editor, and through unstinting service to the American Mathematical Society and to the Mathematical Association of America. Much of Paul's in?uence ?owed at a personal level. Paul had a genuine, uncalculating interest in people; he developed an enormous number of friendships over the years, both with mathematicians and with nonmathematicians. Many of his mathematical friends, including the editors ofthisvolume,whileabsorbingabundantquantitiesofmathematicsatPaul'sknee, learned from his advice and his example what it means to be a mathematician.
Table of Contents
Preface. 1. About Paul Halmos.- Paul Halmos - Expositor par excellence, by V. S. Sunder.- Paul Halmos: In his own words, by John Ewing.- Obituary: Paul Halmos, 1916-2006, by Heydar Radjavi and Peter Rosenthal.- Mathematical Review of How to write mathematics, by George Piranian.- 2. Publications of Paul R. Halmos.- Photos.- 4. Articles.- Jim Agler and John E. McCarthy, What can Hilbert spaces tell us about bounded functions in the bidisk?.- William Arveson, Dilation theory yesterday and today.- Sheldon Axler, Toeplitz operators.- Hari Bercovici, Dual algebras and invariant subspaces.- John B. Conway and Nathan S. Feldman, The state of subnormal operators.- Raul Curto and Mihai Putinar, Polynomially hyponormal operators.- Kenneth R. Davidson, Essentially normal operators.- Michael A. Dritschel and James Rovnyak, The operator Fejer-Riesz Theorem.- Paul S. Muhly, A Halmos doctrine and shifts on Hilbert space.- V. V. Peller, The behavior of functions of operators under perturbations.- Gilles Pisier, The Halmos similarity problem.- Heydar Radjavi and Peter Rosenthal, Paul Halmos and invariant subspaces.
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