Gian-Carlo Rota
Gian-Carlo Rota | |
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Jacob T. Schwartz | |
Notable students |
Gian-Carlo Rota (April 27, 1932 – April 18, 1999) was an Italian-American
Early life and education
Rota was born in
Rota attended the Colegio Americano de Quito in Ecuador, and graduated with an A.B. in mathematics from Princeton University in 1953 after completing a senior thesis, titled "On the solubility of linear equations in topological vector spaces", under the supervision of William Feller. He then pursued graduate studies at Yale University, where he received a Ph.D. in mathematics in 1956 after completing a doctoral dissertation, titled "Extension Theory Of Ordinary Linear Differential Operators", under the supervision of Jacob T. Schwartz.[3][4]
Career
Much of Rota's career was spent as a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he was and remains the only person ever to be appointed Professor of Applied Mathematics and Philosophy. Rota was also the Norbert Wiener Professor of Applied Mathematics.
In addition to his professorships at MIT, Rota held four honorary degrees, from the University of Strasbourg, France (1984); the
He taught a difficult but very popular course in
Rota began his career as a functional analyst, but switched to become a distinguished combinatorialist. His series of ten papers on the "Foundations of Combinatorics" in the 1960s is credited with making it a respectable branch of modern mathematics.[5] He said that the one combinatorial idea he would like to be remembered for is the correspondence between combinatorial problems and problems of the location of the zeroes of polynomials.[8] He worked on the theory of incidence algebras (which generalize the 19th-century theory of Möbius inversion) and popularized their study among combinatorialists, set the umbral calculus on a rigorous foundation, unified the theory of Sheffer sequences and polynomial sequences of binomial type, and worked on fundamental problems in probability theory. His philosophical work was largely in the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl.[9]
Rota founded the Advances in Mathematics journal in 1961.[5]
Death
Rota died of atherosclerotic cardiac disease on April 18, 1999, apparently in his sleep at his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
See also
- Kallman–Rota inequality
- Rota's conjecture
- Rota's basis conjecture
- Rota–Baxter algebra
- Joint spectral radius, introduced by Rota in the early 1960s
- Cyclotomic identity
- Necklace ring
- Twelvefold way
- List of American philosophers
Notes
- ^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Gian-Carlo Rota", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
- ISBN 9781568815831.
His aunt, Rosetta Rota (1911–2003), was a mathematician associated with the renowned Rome university Institute of Physics in Via Panispenra…
- ^ "American Mathematical Society | Gian-Carlo Rota (1932–1999)" (PDF).
- ^ Rota, Gian Carlo (1956). Extension Theory Of Ordinary Linear Differential Operators (Thesis). New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University.
- ^ a b c "MIT professor Gian-Carlo Rota, mathematician and philosopher, is dead at 66". MIT News. 1999-04-22. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ Wesley T. Chan (December 5, 1997). "To Teach or Not To Teach: Professors Might Try a New Approach to Classes – Caring about Teaching". The Tech. Vol. 117, no. 63. p. 5. Retrieved 2008-02-10.
- ^ "Gian-Carlo Rota". The Tech. Vol. 119, no. 21. April 23, 1999. Retrieved 2008-02-10.
- ^ "Mathematics, Philosophy, and Artificial Intelligence: a dialogue with Gian-Carlo Rota and David Sharp". LANL. 1985. p. 99. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ISBN 978-90-481-5448-7.
External links
- Gian-Carlo Rota at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Gian-Carlo Rota", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
- Kung, Joseph; Rota, Gian-Carlo; Yan, Catherine (2009). ISBN 978-0-521-73794-4.
- The Forbidden City of Gian-Carlo Rota (a memorial site) at the Wayback Machine (archived June 30, 2007) This page at www.rota.org was not originally intended to be a memorial web site, but was created by Rota himself with the assistance of his friend Bill Chen in January 1999 while Rota was visiting Los Alamos National Laboratory.
- Mathematics, Philosophy, and Artificial Intelligence: a dialogue with Gian-Carlo Rota and David Sharp at the Wayback Machine (archived August 11, 2007). From Los Alamos Science No. 12 (PDF).
- "Fine Hall in its golden age: Remembrances of Princeton in the early fifties" by Gian-Carlo Rota.
- Tribute page by Prof. Catherine Yan (Texas A&M University), a former student of Rota
- Scanned copy of Gian-Carlo Rota's and Kenneth Baclawski's Introduction to Probability and Random Processes manuscript in its 1979 version.
- Gian-Carlo Rota (1996). Indiscrete Thoughts. Birkhäuser Boston. ISBN 0-8176-3866-0; review at MAA.org
- The Digital Footprint of Gian-Carlo Rota: International Conference in memory of Gian-Carlo Rota, organized by Ottavio D'Antona, Vincenzo Marra and Ernesto Damiani at the University of Milan (Italy)
- Gian-Carlo Rota on Analysis and Probability, ISBN 978-0-8176-4275-4.
- Joseph P. S. Kung, "Gian-Carlo Rota", Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences (2016)