French mathematician
Marie-Hélène Schwartz (1913 – 5 January 2013) was a French mathematician, known for her work on characteristic numbers of spaces with singularities .[ 1] [ 2]
Education and career
Born Marie-Hélène Lévy, she was the daughter of mathematician Paul Lévy and the great-granddaughter of philologist Henri Weil . After studying at the Lycée Janson-de-Sailly , she began studies at the École Normale Supérieure in 1934 but contracted tuberculosis which forced her to drop out. She married another Jewish mathematician, Laurent Schwartz , in 1938, and both soon went into hiding while the Nazis occupied France. After the war, she taught at the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne and finished a thesis on generalizations of the Gauss–Bonnet formula in 1953. In 1964, she moved to the University of Lille , from where she retired in 1981.[ 1] [ 3]
Recognition
A conference was held in her honour in Lille in 1986, and a day of lectures in Paris honoured her 80th birthday in 1993, during which she presented a two-hour talk herself. She continued publishing mathematical research into her late 80s.[ 1]
References
^ a b c Kosmann-Schwarzbach, Yvette (2015), "Women mathematicians in France in the mid-twentieth century", BSHM Bulletin: Journal of the British Society for the History of Mathematics , 30 (3): 227– 242, arXiv :1502.07597 , doi :10.1080/17498430.2014.976804 , S2CID 119148294 .
^ Audin, Michèle; Sabbah, Claude (17 January 2013), "Marie-Hélène Schwartz" , Images des Mathématiques (in French), CNRS .
^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F. , "Marie-Hélène Schwartz" , MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive , University of St Andrews
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