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H J Ryser

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Residence
  
United States

Fields
  
Mathematics

Role
  
Professor of mathematics

Name
  
H. Ryser

Alma mater
  
University of Toronto


H. J. Ryser

Born
  
July 28, 1923 Milwaukee, Wisconsin (
1923-07-28
)

Institutions
  
University of Wisconsin –Madison

Died
  
July 12, 1985, Pasadena, California, United States

Education
  
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Books
  
Combinatorial Matrix Theory, Combinatorial mathematics

Herbert John Ryser (July 28, 1923 – July 12, 1985) was a professor of mathematics, widely regarded as one of the major figures in combinatorics in the 20th century. He is the namesake of the Bruck–Ryser–Chowla theorem and Ryser's formula for the computation of the permanent of a matrix.

Contents

Early life

Ryser was born to the family of Fred G. and Edna (Huels) Ryser. He received the B.A. (1945), M.A. (1947), and Ph.D. (1948) from the University of Wisconsin. His doctoral thesis "Rational Vector Spaces" was supervised by Cornelius Joseph Everett, Jr. and Cyrus C. MacDuffee. (Ryser was Everett's only doctoral student.)

Career

After his Ph.D., Ryser spent a year at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study, then joined the faculty of Ohio State University. In 1962 he took a professorship at Syracuse University, and in 1967 moved to Caltech. His doctoral students include Richard A. Brualdi, Clement W. H. Lam, and Marion Tinsley.

Ryser contributed to the theory of combinatorial designs, finite set systems, the permanent, combinatorial functions, and to many other topics in combinatorics. For many years, he served as editor of the journals Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Linear and Multilinear Algebra, and Journal of Algebra. Ryser's estate funded an endowment creating undergraduate mathematics scholarships at Caltech known as the H. J. Ryser Scholarships.

The Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series A denoted two issues after Ryser's passing as the "Herbert J. Ryser Memorial Issue", parts 1 and 2.

Books

  • Combinatorial Mathematics (1963), #14 of the Carus Mathematical Monographs, published by the Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 0-88385-014-1. Republished and translated into several languages.
  • Brualdi, Richard A.; Ryser, Herbert John (1991-07-26). Combinatorial matrix theory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-32265-2. 
  • Selected papers

  • Ryser, H. J. (1987). "Combinatorial Properties of Matrices of Zeros and Ones". Classic Papers in Combinatorics: 269–275. doi:10.1007/978-0-8176-4842-8_18. 
  • Bruck, R. H.; H. J. Ryser (1949). "The non-existence of certain finite projective planes". Canadian Journal of Mathematics: 88–93. doi:10.4153/cjm-1949-009-2. 
  • Ryser, H. J. (August 1951). "A combinatorial theorem with an application to Latin rectangles" (PDF). Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. American Mathematical Society. 2 (4): 550–552. doi:10.1090/s0002-9939-1951-0042361-0. 
  • References

    H. J. Ryser Wikipedia


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