American mathematician (1930–1978)
Karel deLeeuw , or de Leeuw ((1930-02-20 ) February 20, 1930 – (1978-08-18 ) August 18, 1978), was a mathematics professor at Stanford University , specializing in harmonic analysis and functional analysis .
Life and career
Born in Chicago, Illinois , he attended the Illinois Institute of Technology and the University of Chicago , earning a B.S. degree in 1950. He stayed at Chicago to earn an M.S. degree in mathematics in 1951, then went to Princeton University , where he obtained a Ph.D. degree in 1954.[ 1] His thesis, titled "The relative cohomology structure of formations", was written under the direction of Emil Artin .[ 2]
After first teaching mathematics at Dartmouth College and the University of Wisconsin–Madison , he joined the Stanford University faculty[ 3] in 1957, becoming a full professor in 1966. During sabbaticals and leaves he also spent time at the Institute for Advanced Study and at Churchill College, Cambridge (where he was a Fulbright Fellow ). He was also a Member-at-Large of the Council of the American Mathematical Society .[ 1]
Death and legacy
DeLeeuw was murdered by Theodore Streleski , a Stanford doctoral student for 19 years, whom he advised.[ 4] DeLeeuw's widow Sita deLeeuw was critical of media coverage of the crime, saying, "The media, in their eagerness to give Streleski a forum, become themselves accomplices in the murder—giving Streleski what he wanted in the first place."[ 5]
A memorial lecture series was established in 1978 by the Stanford Department of Mathematics to honor deLeeuw's memory.[ 6] [ 7]
Selected publications
deLeeuw, Karel (1966). "Calculus" (Document). Harcourt, Brace . [ 8]
Rudin, Walter ; de Leeuw, Karel (1958). "Extreme points and extremum problems in H 1 " . Pacific Journal of Mathematics . 8 (3): 467– 485. doi :10.2140/pjm.1958.8.467 .
de Leeuw, Karel (1965). "On L p multipliers". Annals of Mathematics . Second Series. 81 (2). The Annals of Mathematics, Vol. 81, No. 2: 364– 379. doi :10.2307/1970621 . JSTOR 1970621 .
de Leeuw, Karel (1975). "An harmonic analysis for operators. I. Formal properties" . Illinois J. Math . 19 (4): 593– 606. doi :10.1215/ijm/1256050668 . ISSN 0019-2082 .
de Leeuw, Karel (1977). "An harmonic analysis for operators. II. Operators on Hilbert space and analytic operators" . Illinois J. Math . 21 (1): 164– 175. doi :10.1215/ijm/1256049511 . ISSN 0019-2082 .
de Leeuw, Karel; Yitzhak Katznelson; Jean-Pierre Kahane (1977). "Sur les coefficients de Fourier des fonctions continues". Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série A et B . 285 (16): A1001 – A1003 . ISSN 0997-4482 .
References
^ a b "Memorial resolution: Karel deLeeuw (1930 – 1978)" (PDF) . Stanford University. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 5, 2012. Retrieved May 7, 2013 .
^ "Karel DeLeeuw - the Mathematics Genealogy Project" .
^ Duren, Peter L., ed. (1989). A century of mathematics in America: Part II . American Mathematical Society. p. 270. ISBN 0-8218-0130-9 . Retrieved May 7, 2013 .
^ "American Notes Crime - Unrepentant about Murder" . TIME Magazine . September 23, 1985.
^ "Widow of Slain Professor Speaks Out" . Los Angeles Times . October 5, 1985.
^ "Karel deLeeuw Memorial Lecture: "On the Mathematics of Genomic Imprinting" " (PDF) . Stanford University. November 13, 2008. Retrieved May 7, 2013 .[permanent dead link ]
^ "Karel deLeeuw Memorial Lecture: "Archimedes' Hydrostatics and the Birth of Mathematical Physics" " (PDF) . Stanford University. June 6, 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-07-14. Retrieved May 7, 2013 .
^ Dorner, George C. (1968-01-01). "Review of Calculus". The Mathematics Teacher . 61 (8): 804– 805. JSTOR 27958003 .
External links
International National Academics