Martha Bettina Richmond (née Zoeller, January 30, 1958 – November 22, 2009) was a German-American mathematician, mathematics textbook author, professor at Western Kentucky University, and murder victim.
Life
Richmond was born in Dresden on January 30, 1958,[1] earned a vordiplom (the German equivalent of a bachelor's degree) from the University of Würzburg,[E] and completed her Ph.D. at Florida State University in 1985.[2] Her doctoral dissertation, Freeness of Hopf algebras over grouplike subalgebras, was supervised by Warren Nichols, a student of Irving Kaplansky.[3]
Richmond was stabbed to death on November 22, 2009, in the parking lot of a racquetball facility in downtown Bowling Green, Kentucky. According to the FBI, her murder was likely an opportunistic crime motivated by armed robbery.[5] At the time of her death, she had been on leave from her faculty position to assist her father in Germany. The murder is still unsolved.[6]
Richmond, Bettina; Richmond, Thomas (2004), A Discrete Transition To Advanced Mathematics, Thomson/Brooks/Cole; reprinted by American Mathematical Society, Pure and Applied Undergraduate Texts 3, 2009; 2nd ed., Pure and Applied Undergraduate Texts 63, 2023[7]
^Scharfschwerdt, Boris (2001), "The Nichols Zoeller theorem for Hopf algebras in the category of Yetter Drinfeld modules", Communications in Algebra, 29 (6): 2481–2487, doi:10.1081/AGB-100002402, MR1845124, S2CID121147441