American mathematician
Irving Reiner (February 8, 1924 in Brooklyn , New York – October 28, 1986 in Urbana , Illinois ) was a mathematician at the University of Illinois who worked on representation theory . He solved the problem of finding which abelian groups have a finite number of indecomposable modules . His book with Charles W. Curtis , (Curtis & Reiner 1962 ), was for many years the standard text on representation theory.
Life
Reiner obtained his Ph.D. from Cornell University in 1947; his dissertation, A generalization of Meyer's theorem , was written under the supervision of Burton Wadsworth Jones . He met another one of Jones' students, Irma Moses, leading to their marriage in August 1948 and two children, Peter Reiner and David Reiner.[ 1]
Reiner met Hua Luogeng while at the Institute for Advanced Study and subsequently collaborated on three joint papers:
On the generators of the symplectic modular group (1949);
Automorphisms of the unimodular group (1951);
Automorphisms of the projective unimodular group (1952).
They remained friends as they attended the University of Illinois , before Hua returned to his native China and Reiner remained in Illinois.
Bibliography
Curtis, Charles W. ; Reiner, Irving (1962), Representation theory of finite groups and associative algebras , Pure and Applied Mathematics, Vol. XI, Interscience Publishers, a division of John Wiley & Sons, New York-London, ISBN 978-0-8218-4066-5 , MR 0144979
Roggenkamp, Klaus W. ; Reiner, Irving (1979), Orders and their applications: Proceedings of a conference held in Oberwolfach, West Germany, June 3-9, 1984 , Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Springer-Verlag, ISBN 9783540396017
Curtis, Charles W. ; Reiner, Irving (1990), Methods of Representation Theory: With Applications to Finite Groups and Orders , Wiley Classics Library, John Wiley & Sons, New York-London, ISBN 0471523674
References
External links
International National Academics People Other