Isidore Isaac Hirschman Jr.
Isidore Isaac Hirschman Jr. (1922–1990) was an American mathematician, and professor at Washington University in St. Louis working on analysis.
Isidore Isaac Hirschman | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Harvard |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Harmonic analysis Operator theory |
Institutions | Washington University |
Thesis | Some Representation and Inversion Problems for the Laplace Transform (1947) |
Doctoral advisor | David Widder |
Influenced | Richard Askey |
Life
Hirschman earned his Ph.D. in 1947 from Harvard under David Widder. After writing ten papers together, Hirschman and Widder published a book entitled The Convolution Transform.[1] Hirschman spent most of his career (1949–1978) at Washington University, where he published mainly in harmonic analysis and operator theory. Washington University holds a lecture series given by Hirschman, with one lecture given by Richard Askey.[1] While Askey was at Washington University, Hirschman asked him to solve an ultraspherical polynomial problem. Askey says in this lecture, "This led to a joint paper, and was what started my interest in special functions." [2]
Research
Hirschman's Ph.D. was entitled “Some Representation and Inversion Problems for the Laplace Transform,” He mainly published papers in harmonic analysis and operator theory. In 1959 Hirschman wrote a paper with Askey, Weighted quadratic norms and ultraspherical polynomials, which was published in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society.[2] This was one of the two articles Hirschman and Askey co-wrote to complete Hirschman's 1955 research program.[2]
In 1964 Hirschman published Extreme eigen values of Toeplitz forms associated with Jacobi polynomials, showing that for banded Toeplitz matrices, eigenvalues accumulate on a spatial curve, in the complex plane with the normalized eigenvalue counting measure converging weakly to a measure on this curve as .[3]
Bibliography
- Hirschman, I. (1962). Infinite Series. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.[4] – A textbook for advanced undergraduate and graduate mathematics.
- Hirschman, Isidore Isaac; Widder, David Vernon (1955). The Convolution Transform. New York: Princeton University Press; now available from Dover Publications.[5]
References
- "Who's That Mathematician? Paul R. Halmos Collection – Page 23 | Mathematical Association of America". www.maa.org. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
- "Askey biography". www-groups.dcs.st-andrews.ac.uk. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
- Hirschman, I. I. (1964-01-01). "Extreme eigen values of Toeplitz forms associated with Jacobi polynomials". Pacific Journal of Mathematics. 14 (1): 107–161. ISSN 0030-8730.
- Hirschman, Isidore (2014-11-28). Infinite Series (Reprint ed.). Dover Publications Inc. ISBN 9780486789750.
- Hirschman, Isidore Isaac; Widder, David Vernon (2012-05-04). The Convolution Transform. Courier Corporation. ISBN 9780486154565.
- Isidore Isaac Hirschman Jr. at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- http://mathdl.maa.org/mathDL/46/?pa=content&sa=viewDocument&nodeId=3801&bodyId=4189