Paul Funk

Paul Georg Funk (14 April 1886, Vienna – 3 June 1969, Vienna) was an Austrian mathematician who introduced the Funk transform and who worked on the calculus of variations.

Born in Vienna in 1886, he studied mathematics in Tübingen, Vienna, and Göttingen, writing his dissertation under the supervision of David Hilbert. He spent the interwar years in Prague as Professor of Mathematics at the Deutsche Technische Hochschule Prag.[1] Suspended from his professorship in 1939 on account of his being Jewish, Funk was deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1944, where he spent the last months of the war.[2]

Publications

  • Funk, Paul (1962), Variationsrechnung und ihre Anwendung in Physik und Technik, Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften (in German), 94, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-3-540-04830-5, MR 0152914

References

  1. "„Kühler Abschied von Europa" – Wien 1938 und der Exodus der Mathematik" (PDF) (in German). Österreichische Mathematische Gesellschaft. 2001: 72. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. Georgiadou, Maria. Constantin Carathéodory: Mathematics and Politics in Turbulent Times. Berlin: Springer. p. 425. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-18562-5. ISBN 978-3-642-18562-5.
  • Basch, A. (1956). "Paul Funk zum 70. Geburtstag". Österreich Ingenieur-Archiv. 10: 117–119. MR 0080050.
  • Dann, Susanna (2010), On the Minkowski-Funk Transform, arXiv:1003.5565, Bibcode:2010arXiv1003.5565D
  • Hornich, S. H. (1970). "Nachruf auf Paul Funk". Almanach der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien. 119: 271–277.
  • Maximilian Pinl: Kollegen in dunkler Zeit. Jahresbericht DMV Bd.75, 1974, S.172.
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