Russian mathematician
Stefan Cohn-Vossen (28 May 1902 – 25 June 1936) was a mathematician , who was responsible for Cohn-Vossen's inequality and the Cohn-Vossen transformation is also named after him.[ 1] He proved the first version of the splitting theorem .
He was also known for his collaboration with David Hilbert on the 1932 book Anschauliche Geometrie , translated into English as Geometry and the Imagination .[ 2]
He was born in Breslau (then a city in the Kingdom of Prussia ; now Wrocław in Poland ). He wrote a 1924 doctoral dissertation at the University of Breslau (now the University of Wrocław ) under the supervision of Adolf Kneser .[ 3] He became a professor at the University of Cologne in 1930.
He was barred from lecturing in 1933 under Nazi racial legislation , because he was Jewish .[ 4] In 1934 he emigrated to the USSR , with some help from Herman Müntz .[ 5] While there, he taught at Leningrad University . He died in Moscow from pneumonia .[ 6]
See also
References
^ Voitsekhovskii, M.I. (2001) [1994], "Cohn-Vossen transformation" , Encyclopedia of Mathematics , EMS Press
^ Hilbert, David ; Cohn-Vossen, Stephan (1952). Geometry and the Imagination (2nd ed.). Chelsea. ISBN 0-8284-1087-9 .
^ Stefan Cohn-Vossen at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
^ Siegmund-Schultze, Reinhard (2009), Mathematicians Fleeing from Nazi Germany: Individual Fates and Global Impact , Princeton University Press, pp. 132, 133, 346, 370, 373, 399, ISBN 9780691140414 .
^ Siegmund-Schultze 2009 (p.133) quotes from a 1937 letter by Müntz: "The appointments of Cohn-Vossen, Walfisz, Pollaczek (the latter was not allowed to slip in again) were immediately influenced by myself, the ones for Plessner and Bergmann indirectly."
^ Cohn-Vossen's Obituary (in Russian )
External links
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