By 1962, Francis had left the field of numerical analysis, and subsequently had no idea of the impact his work on the QR algorithm had had, until re-contacted by Gene Golub and Frank Uhlig in 2007, by which time he was retired and living in Hove, England (near Brighton).[5] Still in good health, he was the opening speaker at a mini-symposium that marked 50 years of the QR algorithm, held at the 23rd Biennial Conference on Numerical Analysis in Glasgow in June 2009.[6] Francis was awarded a University of Sussex honorary doctorate in July 2015.[7]
^Vera N. Kublanovskaya (1961), "On some algorithms for the solution of the complete eigenvalue problem," USSR Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics, 1(3), pages 637–657 (1963, received Feb 1961). Also published in: Zhurnal Vychislitel'noi Matematiki i Matematicheskoi Fiziki [Journal of Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics], 1(4), pages 555–570 (1961).
^"John Francis". University of Sussex. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
Further reading
Gene Golub, Frank Uhlig (2009), "The QR algorithm: 50 years later – its genesis by John Francis and Vera Kublanovskaya, and subsequent developments", IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis, vol. 29, no. 3, pages 467-485.advanced publication onlinedoi:10.1093/imanum/drp012