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William Henry Young

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Fields
  
Mathematics

Children
  
Laurence Chisholm Young


Role
  
Mathematician

Name
  
William Young

Awards
  
De Morgan Medal

William Henry Young William Henry Young

Known for
  
Young's inequality Hausdorff–Young inequality Young's Theorem

Notable awards
  
De Morgan Medal (1917) Sylvester Medal (1928)

Died
  
July 7, 1942, Lausanne, Switzerland

Spouse
  
Grace Chisholm Young (m. 1896)

Books
  
The Theory of Sets of Points, The fundamental theorems, A Study of Action‑adventure Fiction: T, The Fundamental Theorem, Beginner's Book of Geometry

Education
  
University of Cambridge

William Henry Young


William Henry Young FRS (London, 20 October 1863 – Lausanne, 7 July 1942) was an English mathematician. Young was educated at City of London School and Peterhouse, Cambridge. He worked on measure theory, Fourier series, differential calculus, amongst other fields, and made contributions to the study of functions of several complex variables. He was the husband of Grace Chisholm Young, with whom he authored and co-authored 214 papers and 4 books. Two of their children became professional mathematicians (Laurence Chisholm Young, Cecilia Rosalind Tanner). Young's Theorem was named after him.

Contents

William Henry Young William Henry Young

In 1913 he was the first to be appointed to the newly created chair of Hardinge Professorship of Pure Mathematics in Calcutta University which he held from 1913 to 1917. He also held the part-time Professorship of Philosophy and the History of Mathematics at the University of Liverpool from 1913 to 1919.

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society on 2 May 1907. He served as the president of the London Mathematical Society from 1922 to 1924. In 1917 he was awarded the De Morgan Medal of London Mathematical Society and in 1928 the Sylvester Medal of the Royal Society.

He served as the president of the International Mathematical Union from 1929 to 1936.

Works

  • Young, William Henry (1910). The fundamental theorems of the differential calculus. Cambridge University Press. 
  • William Henry Young, Grace Chisholm Young (1905). The first book of geometry. J. M. Dent. 
  • William Henry Young & Grace Chisholm Young (1906) The Theory of Sets of Points, link from Internet Archive.
  • References

    William Henry Young Wikipedia


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