Fritz Herzog

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Fritz Herzog (6 December 1902 to 21 November 2001[1]) was an American mathematician, known for his work in complex analysis and power series.

He was born in Germany and studied at the

University of Berlin
until 1934 when he moved to United States. He received his
Ph.D. degree at Columbia University
on a thesis entitled Systems of Algebraic Mixed Difference Equations advised by Joseph Ritt (1934).[2] Herzog was an electrical engineering research associate at Cornell University (1938–43), working with Michel G. Malti on dynamo research. Together they solved an important electric power problem on balancing dynamos, which had remained open since the days of Michael Faraday a century before.[3][4] Most of his career was spent at Michigan State University (1943–73) where he gave name to the Fritz Herzog Prize Endowment Fund. Herzog died at
East Lansing
of prostate cancer.

He had a wife named Helen (née' Korngold) Herzog.

References

  1. ^ Notices of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 49, no. 6, p.694 (2002)
  2. ^ entry at Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. New York Times
    . 13 March 1939. Retrieved 2008-06-27.
  4. Washington Post
    . 13 March 1939. Retrieved 2008-06-27.