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Aleksandr Khinchin

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Nationality
  
Russian, Soviet

Fields
  
Mathematics


Role
  
Mathematician

Name
  
Aleksandr Khinchin

Doctoral advisor
  
Nikolai Luzin


Born
  
July 19, 1894 Kondrovo, Russian Empire (present-day Kaluga Oblast, Russia) (
1894-07-19
)

Institutions
  
Moscow State University

Alma mater
  
Moscow State University

Doctoral students
  
Alexander Buchstab Alexander Gelfond Dmitry Raikov

Died
  
November 18, 1959, Moscow, Russia

Books
  
Mathematical foundations of statistic, Mathematical foundations of informa, Three pearls of number t, An Elementary Introducti, Continued fractions

Similar People
  
Boris Vladimirovich Gnedenko, Nikolai Luzin, Alexander Gelfond

Education
  
Moscow State University

Aleksandr Yakovlevich Khinchin (Russian: Алекса́ндр Я́ковлевич Хи́нчин, French: Alexandre Khintchine; July 19, 1894 – November 18, 1959) was a Soviet mathematician and one of the most significant people in the Soviet school of probability theory.

Life and career

He was born in the village of Kondrovo, Kaluga Governorate, Russian Empire. While studying at Moscow State University, he became one of the first followers of the famous Luzin school. Khinchin graduated from the university in 1916 and six years later he became a full professor there, retaining that position until his death.

Khinchin's early works focused on real analysis. Later he applied methods from the metric theory of functions to problems in probability theory and number theory. He became one of the founders of modern probability theory, discovering the law of the iterated logarithm in 1924, achieving important results in the field of limit theorems, giving a definition of a stationary process and laying a foundation for the theory of such processes.

Khinchin made significant contributions to the metric theory of Diophantine approximations and established an important result for simple real continued fractions, discovering a property of such numbers that leads to what is now known as Khinchin's constant. He also published several important works on statistical physics, where he used the methods of probability theory, and on information theory, queuing theory and mathematical analysis.

In 1939 Khinchin was elected as a Correspondent Member of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. He was awarded the Stalin Prize (1941), the Order of Lenin, three other orders, and medals.

References

Aleksandr Khinchin Wikipedia