Biography:Stanley Skewes

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Short description: South African mathematician (1899–1988)
Stanley Skewes
Born1899
Germiston, South African Republic
Died1988 (Aged 89)
Cape Town, South Africa
Alma materUniversity of Cape Town
University of Cambridge
Known forSkewes's numbers
Spouse(s)Ena Allen
Scientific career
Academic advisorsJohn Edensor Littlewood

File:Skewes Liebl Zurich1932.tif File:Young Skewes Schieldrop Tricomi Cartwright Zurich1932.tif

Stanley Skewes (/skjz/; 1899–1988) was a South African mathematician, best known for his discovery of the Skewes's number in 1933. He was one of John Edensor Littlewood's students at Cambridge University.[1][2] Skewes's numbers contributed to the refinement of the theory of prime numbers.

Academic career

Skewes obtained a degree in civil engineering from the University of Cape Town before emigrating to England. He studied mathematics at Cambridge University and obtained a PhD in mathematics in 1938.[3]

He discovered the first Skewes's number in 1933[1][2]. This is also referred to as the Riemann true Skewes's number[4] owing to its relationship to the Riemann hypothesis as related to prime number theory. He discovered the second Skewes's number in 1955.[2][5] This number was applicable if the Riemann hypothesis is false. Since his original discovery the numbers have been further refined.

Publications

  • Skewes, S. (1933). "On the difference π(x) − Li(x) (I)". Journal of the London Mathematical Society 8 (4): 277–283. doi:10.1112/jlms/s1-8.4.277. 
  • Skewes, S. (1955). "On the difference π(x) − Li(x) (II)". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 5 (17): 48–70. doi:10.1112/plms/s3-5.1.48. 

Personal life

Stanley Skewes was born in Germiston, South Africa in 1899. His parents were Henry (Harry) Skewes, a tin miner and assayer from Cury, Cornwall, England and Emily Moyle, who was American by birth. His parents moved from Redruth, Cornwall in 1894 to the Transvaal, South Africa.

He married Ena Allen. She was the daughter of the head chef at King's College, Cambridge, and a talented opera singer. Among his contemporaries at Cambridge was Alan Turing. They rowed together at Cambridge. Although Skewes returned to South Africa, he revisited Cambridge and Cornwall. He was also a keen rugby player in his youth. [2]

Skewes and his number are discussed by Isaac Asimov in his book Of Matters Great and Small[6][7] and in the 20th edition of the Guinness Book of Records.[7][8] A memorandum written by Skewes on his retirement was kept in a glass case in the department of mathematics at the University of Cape Town. The memorandum discuses Skewes's number and further development of it.[2]

He died in 1988 in Cape Town, South Africa.

References