Biography:Nikolai Günther

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Short description: Russian mathematician
Nikolai Maximovich Günther
Николай Максимович Гюнтер
Born(1871-12-17)December 17, 1871
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
DiedMay 4, 1941(1941-05-04) (aged 69)
Leningrad, Soviet Union
NationalityRussia n, Soviet
Alma materSaint Petersburg University
Scientific career
Fields
InstitutionsSaint Petersburg University
Doctoral advisorAndrey Markov

Nikolai Maximovich Günther (Russian: Николай Максимович Гюнтер, also transliterated as Nicholas M. Gunther[1] or N. M. Gjunter[2]) (December 17 [O.S. December 5] 1871 – May 4, 1941) was a Russian mathematician known for his work in potential theory and in integral and partial differential equations: later studies have uncovered his contributions to the theory of Gröbner bases.[2]

He was an Invited Speaker of the ICM in 1924 at Toronto,[3] in 1928 at Bologna,[4][5] and in 1932 at Zurich.

Selected publications

See also

Notes

  1. (Gunther 1934).
  2. 2.0 2.1 (Renschuch Roloff).
  3. Dresden, Arnold (1925). "The International Congress at Toronto". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 31: 1–10. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1925-03982-8. 
  4. Gunther, N. "Sur les intégrales de Stieltjes généralisées." In Atti del Congresso Internazionale dei Matematici: Bologna del 3 al 10 de settembre di 1928, vol. 2, pp. 312–324. 1929.
  5. Gunther, N. "Sur le mouvement d'un liquide, enfermé dans un vase qui se deplace." In Atti del Congresso Internazionale dei Matematici: Bologna del 3 al 10 de settembre di 1928, vol. 5, pp. 185–192. 1929.

References

Biographical and general references

  • Kurosh, A. G.; Markushevich, A. I.; Rashevskii, P. K., eds. (1948) (in ru), Москва–Ленинград: Государственное Издательство Физико–Математическои Литературы, pp. 1044 . The "Mathematics in the USSR during its first thirty years 1917–1947" is an opus describing the developments of Soviet mathematics during the first thirty years of its existence. It consists of several survey articles, authored by Soviet experts and reviewing briefly the contributions of Soviet mathematicians to a chosen field during the years from 1917 to 1947: it was later expanded as the two volume survey (Kurosh et al. Kurosh|Vityushkov|Boltyanskii|Dynkin|1959a}}|1959a, Kurosh|Vityushkov|Boltyanskii|Dynkin|1959b}}|1959b).
  • Kurosh, A. G.; Vityushkov, V. I.; Boltyanskii, V. G. et al., eds. (1959a) (in ru), Том пербый: Обзорные статьи, Москва: Государственное Издательство Физико–Математическои Литературы, pp. 1002 . The "Mathematics in the USSR during its first forty years 1917–1957" is an opus in two volumes describing the developments of Soviet mathematics during the first forty years of its existence. This is the first volume, titled "Survey articles" and consists exactly of such kind of articles authored by Soviet experts and reviewing briefly the contributions of Soviet mathematicians to a chosen field, during the years from 1917 to 1957.
  • Kurosh, A. G.; Vityushkov, V. I.; Boltyanskii, V. G. et al., eds. (1959b) (in ru), Том второй: Биобиблиография, Москва: Государственное Издательство Физико–Математическои Литературы, pp. 819 . The "Mathematics in the USSR during its first forty years 1917–1957" is an opus in two volumes describing the developments of Soviet mathematics during the first forty years of its existence. This is the second volume, titled "Biobibliography" (evidently an acronym for biography and bibliography), containing a complete bibliography of works published by Soviet mathematicians during that time period, alphabetically ordered with respect to author's surname and including, when possible, brief but complete biographies of the authors.
  • Lorentz, G.G. (2002), "Mathematics and politics in the Soviet Union from 1928 to 1953", Journal of Approximation Theory 116 (2): 169–223, doi:10.1006/jath.2002.3670 . See also the final version available from the "George Lorentz" section of the Approximation Theory web page at the Mathematics Department of the Ohio State University (retrieved on 25 October 2009).
  • Smirnov, V. I.; Sobolev, S. L. (1941), (in ru)Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR. Seriya Matematicheskaya 5 (3): 193–202, http://mi.mathnet.ru/eng/izv/v5/i3/p193 . The 1941 obituary of Nikolai Günther written by Vladimir Smirnov and Sergei Sobolev, including a list of his mathematical works.
  • Smirnov, V. I.; Sobolev, S. L. (1967), "A short biography", in Günther, N. M., Potential theory and its applications to basic problems of mathematical physics, New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing, pp. 327–336 , appendix to the book (Günther 1967).

Scientific references

  • Ladyzhenskaya, O. A. (1985), The Boundary Value Problems of Mathematical Physics, Applied Mathematical Sciences, 49, Berlin–Heidelberg–New York: Springer Verlag, pp. XXX+322, doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-4317-3, ISBN 0-521-39922-X .
  • Renschuch, Bodo; Roloff, Hartmut; Rasputin, Georgij G. et al. (June 2003), "Contributions to Constructive Polynomial Ideal Theory XXIII: Forgotten Works of Leningrad Mathematician N. M. Gjunter on Polynomial Ideal Theory", ACM SIGSAM Bulletin 37 (2): 35–48, doi:10.1145/944567.944569, ISSN 0163-5824 . A freely accessible copy is available from the here from the Gröbner Bases Bibliography.