Biography:John Horvath (mathematician)

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Short description: Hungarian-American mathematician


John Michael Horvath (born János Horváth; 30 July 1924 in Budapest – 12 March 2015) was a Hungarian-American mathematician noted for his contributions to analysis especially in functional analysis and distribution theory.[1]

Education and career

Horvath received his doctorate in 1947 from the University of Budapest as a student of Lipót Fejér and Frigyes Riesz. Four other talented mathematicians also graduated in the class of 1947: János Aczél, Ákos Császár, László Fuchs and István Gál. Together with Horvath, they were referred to as the Big Five.[1] After obtaining his doctorate, he went to the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) to do research, then to the University of Los Andes in Bogota, and finally, from 1957 to 1994 he taught in the United States at the University of Maryland and was then awarded the title of Professor Emeritus.[2]

MathSciNet called his book Topological Vector Spaces and Distributions, "The most readable introduction to the theory of vector spaces available in English and possibly any other language."[3]

His work on analytic continuations and a general definition of the Convolution of distributions was essential to Laurent Schwartz who went on to develop a full theory of distributions in the late 1940s.[4]

In 2006 he edited and wrote one of the chapters for A Panorama of Hungarian Mathematics in the Twentieth Century.[1]

He was a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.[1]

Works

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Horvath János Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 24 March 2015
  2. John Horvath: obituary University of Maryland: Department of Mathematics
  3. Topological Vector Spaces and Distributions By: John Horvath, Addison-Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts, 1966, ISBN:0201029855
  4. "On some contributions of John Horvath to the theory of distributions" Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications Vol 297, Issue 2, 15 September 2004, Pages 353-383

External links

John Horvath at the Mathematics Genealogy Project