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Heinrich Burkhardt

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Nationality
  
German

Doctoral advisor
  
Gustav Bauer

Fields
  
Mathematics

Role
  
Mathematician

Name
  
Heinrich Burkhardt


Heinrich Burkhardt

Born
  
15 October 1861 Schweinfurt, Kingdom of Bavaria (
1861-10-15
)

Alma mater
  
Technical University of Munich (1879-1881) University of Berlin (1881/1882) University of Munich (1882/83,1885/86) University of Gottingen (1883/84)

Died
  
November 2, 1914, Munich, Germany

Education
  
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

Heinrich Friedrich Karl Ludwig Burkhardt (15 October 1861 – 2 November 1914) was a German mathematician. He famously was one of the two examiners of Albert Einstein's PhD thesis Eine neue Bestimmung der Moleküldimensionen. Of Einstein's thesis he stated: "The mode of treatment demonstrates fundamental mastery of the relevant mathematical methods" and "What I checked, I found to be correct without exception."

Contents

Biography

Burkhardt was born in Schweinfurt. Starting from 1879 he studied under Karl Weierstrass, Alexander von Brill, and Hermann Amandus Schwarz in Munich (at university and technical university), Berlin and Göttingen. He attained a doctorate in 1886 in Munich under Gustav Conrad Bauer with a thesis entitled: Beziehungen zwischen der Invariantentheorie und der Theorie algebraischer Integrale und ihrer Umkehrungen (Relations between the invariant theory and the theory of algebraic integrals and their inverses).

In 1887 he was an assistant at Göttingen and obtained his habilitation there in 1889. Later he was a professor in Zürich (1897–1908) and Munich (since October 1908). He worked on the theory of the elliptical functions, series expansions, group theory, the Burkhardt quartic, and history of mathematics.

He died in Neuwittelsbach/München, of a disease of the stomach, diagnosed about Easter 1914.

Works

  • 1899: Elliptische Funktionen, zweiter Tiel, from Internet Archive
  • 1903: Algebraische Analysis, from Internet Archive
  • 1908: Entwicklungen nach oscillierenden Funktionen und Integration der Differentialgleichungen der mathematischen physick
  • 1913: Theory of Functions of a Complex Variable, translated by S.E. Rasor, link from Internet Archive
  • References

    Heinrich Burkhardt Wikipedia