Lars Ahlfors : at the summit of mathematics

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Bibliographic Information

Lars Ahlfors : at the summit of mathematics

Olli Lehto ; translated by William Hellberg

American Mathematical Society, c2015

  • : [pbk.]

Other Title

Tieteen huipulla : lars ahlforsin elämä

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Tells the story of the Finnish-American mathematician Lars Ahlfors (1907-1996). He was educated at the University of Helsinki as a student of Ernst Lindelof and Rolf Nevanlinna and later became a professor there. He left Finland permanently in 1944 and was professor and emeritus at Harvard University for more than fifty years. At the age of twenty-one Ahlfors became a well-known mathematician having solved Denjoy's conjecture, and in 1936 he established his world renown when he was awarded the Fields Medal, the "Nobel Prize in mathematics". In this book the description of his mathematics avoids technical details and concentrates on his contributions to the general development of complex analysis. Besides mathematics there is also a lot to tell about Ahlfors. World War II marked his life, and he was a colorful personality, with many interesting stories about him. Olli Lehto, the author of the book, first met Lars Ahlfors and his family as a young doctor at Harvard in 1950. Numerous meetings after that in various parts of the world led to a close friendship between them.

Table of Contents

Family background Exceptional talent emerges Mathematical renown secured To America and back again War years in Finland In Sweden and Switzerland Professorship at Harvard University The legacy of Riemann and Teichmuller New research and return to the old Distinctions Additions to the portrait Epilogue in Finland Sources Index

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