Israeli mathematician
Haim Hanani (Chaim Chojnacki)
Born (1912-09-11 ) 11 September 1912Died 8 April 1991(1991-04-08) (aged 78) Alma mater Hebrew University Scientific career Fields Mathematics Thesis A contribution to the four color problem (1938)
Haim Hanani ((1912-09-11 ) 11 September 1912 as Chaim Chojnacki – 8 April 1991)[ 1] was a Polish-born Israeli mathematician, known for his contributions to combinatorial design theory , in particular for the theory of pairwise balanced designs and for the proof of an existence theorem for Steiner quadruple systems .[ 2] [ 3] He is also known for the Hanani–Tutte theorem on odd crossings in non-planar graphs .
Life
Hanani (Chojnacki) was born in Poland , studied in Vienna and Warsaw, and graduated with an M.A. from the University of Warsaw in 1934. He emigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine , later to become Israel , in 1935 and in 1938 received the first Ph.D. in Mathematics from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem .
In 1955 he was appointed to the faculty at Technion Institute of Technology and from 1969 to 1973 he served as the rector of Ben-Gurion University in Beersheba . In 1980 he was awarded the title of Professor Emeritus at that institution.[ 2]
His early research led to the proof of the theorem devised by Richard M. Wilson on pairwise balance designs.[ 2]
He wrote scholarly papers with Andries Brouwer , Paul Erdős , Alexander Schrijver , and Richard M. Wilson , among others.[ 4]
His papers were published in journals such as Discrete Mathematics , the Journal of Combinatorial Theory , the European Journal of Combinatorics , and the American Mathematical Monthly .[ 2]
Academic papers
References
International National Academics People