Neha Patil (Editor)

Isidore Isaac Hirschman, Jr.

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Nationality
  
American

Alma mater
  
Harvard

Died
  
1990

Influenced
  
Richard Askey

Institutions
  
Washington University

Doctoral advisor
  
David Widder

Education
  
Harvard University (1947)

Fields
  
Harmonic analysis Operator theory

Thesis
  
Some Representation and Inversion Problems for the Laplace Transform (1947)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

People also search for
  
David Widder, Richard Askey, Daniel Edward Hughes

Books
  
The Convolution Transform, The decomposition of Walsh, Infinite series

Isidore Isaac Hirschman, Jr. (1922-1990) was an American mathematician, and professor at Washington University in St. Louis working on analysis.

Contents

Life

Hirschman earned his Ph.D. in 1947 from Harvard under David Widder. After writing ten papers together, Hirschman and Widder published a book entitled The Convolution Transform. Hirschman spent most of his career (1949-1978) at Washington University, where he published mainly in harmonic analysis and operator theory. Washington University holds a lecture series given by Hirschman, with one lecture given by Richard Askey. While Askey was at Washington University, Hirschman asked him to solve an ultraspherical polynomial problem. Askey says in this lecture, "This led to a joint paper, and was what started my interest in special functions."

Research

Hirschman's Ph.D. was entitled “Some Representation and Inversion Problems for the Laplace Transform,” He mainly published papers in harmonic analysis and operator theory. In 1959 Hirschman wrote a paper with Askey, Weighted quadratic norms and ultraspherical polynomials, which was published in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. This was one of the two articles Hirschman and Askey co-wrote to complete Hirschman's 1955 research program.

In 1964 Hirschman published Extreme eigen values of Toeplitz forms associated with Jacobi polynomials, showing that for n × n banded Toeplitz matrices, eigenvalues accumulate on a spacial curve, in the complex plane with the normalized eigenvalue counting measure converging weakly to a measure on this curve as n .

References

Isidore Isaac Hirschman, Jr. Wikipedia