Biography:Anders Wiman

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Short description: Swedish mathematician
Anders Wiman
Anders Wiman SPG.jpg
Born(1865-02-11)11 February 1865
Hammerlöf, Malmöhus County
Died13 August 1959(1959-08-13) (aged 94)
Lund
NationalitySweden
Alma materLund University
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUppsala University
Doctoral advisorCarl Fabian Björling
Doctoral studentsArne Beurling
Fritz Carlson

Anders Wiman (11 February 1865 – 13 August 1959) was a Swedish mathematician.

Life

Wiman attained his doctorate from Lund University in 1892, under supervision of Carl Fabian Björling with thesis Klassifikation af regelytorna af sjette graden (Classification of regular surfaces of degree 6). He later taught at Uppsala University, where Arne Beurling and Fritz Carlson were among his students.

In 1904 Wiman was an Invited Speaker of the ICM in Heidelberg.[1] He was from 1908 an editor of Acta Mathematica.

Awards

He was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1905.

Work

He introduced Wiman's sextic curve.

The main focus of his research was algebraic geometry and applications of group theory to geometry and function theory. He proved that for n > 7, in less than n–2 dimensions, there are no groups of collineations that are isomorphic to the symmetric or alternating group on n symbols. He also determined all finite groups of birational transformations of the plane.[2] Wiman wrote the article on finite groups of linear transformations for Klein's encyclopedia. In function theory he did important work on entire functions. From 1914 to 1916 he introduced what is now called Wiman-Valiron theory (named after him and Georges Valiron).[3][4][5] Wiman's generalization of a theorem of Hadamard is known as Wiman's theorem.[6][7] His investigations on the zeros of the derivatives of entire functions — along with similar investigations by George Pólya – had a great influence on the theory of entire functions; in particular, the now-proved Wiman conjecture,[8] [9] and the now-proved Pólya-Wiman conjecture[10] have inspired much research.

References

  1. "Die metazyklischen Gleichungen 9. Grades von A. Wiman". Verhandlungen des dritten Mathematiker-Kongresses in Heidelberg von 8. bis 13. August 1904. Leipzig: B. G. Teubner. 1905. pp. 190–193. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=miun.aag4063.0004.001;view=1up;seq=206. 
  2. Anders Wiman: Zur Theorie der endlichen Gruppen von birationalen Transformationen in der Ebene (April 1896), Mathematische Annalen 48, September 1896, pp. 195–240
  3. Anders Wiman: Über den Zusammenhang zwischen dem Maximalbetrage einer analytischen Funktion und dem grössten Gliede der zugehörigen Taylor’schen Reihe, Acta Mathematica 37, December 1914, pp. 305–326
  4. Anders Wiman: Über den Zusammenhang zwischen dem Maximalbetrage einer analytischen Funktion und dem grössten Beitrage bei gegebenem Argumente der Funktion, Acta Mathematica 41, December 1916, pp. 1–28
  5. Hayman, W. K. (1974). The local growth of power series: a survey of the Wiman-Valiron method. Canad. Math. Bull, 17(3), 317–358.
  6. Anders Wiman: Sur une extension d’un théorème de M. Hadamard (7. Juni 1905), Arkiv för Matematik, Astronomi och Fysik, vol. 2, issue 14, 1905, pp. 1–5 (in French)
  7. Anders Wiman: Über eine Eigenschaft der ganzen Funktionen von der Höhe Null (11 February 1914), Mathematische Annalen 76, March 1915, pp. 197–211
  8. Terence Sheil-Small: On the zeros of the derivatives of real entire functions and Wiman’s conjecture, Annals of Mathematics (2) 129, 1989, pp. 179–193 doi:10.2307/1971490
  9. W. Bergweiler, A. Eremenko and J. Langley: Real entire functions of infinite order and a conjecture of Wiman, GAFA, 13, 5 (2003), 975-991.
  10. Thomas Craven, George Csordas, Wayne Smith: The zeros of derivatives of entire functions and the Pólya-Wiman conjecture, Annals of Mathematics (2) 125, 1987, pp. 405–431 doi:10.2307/1971315

External links