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Zeng Jiongzhi

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Name
  
Zeng Jiongzhi


Role
  
Mathematician

Zeng Jiongzhi

Died
  
1940, Xikang, Lhasa, China

Zeng Jiongzhi (Chinese: 曾炯之; pinyin: Zēng Jiǒngzhī; Wade–Giles: Tseng Chiung-chih, April 2, 1898 – October 1, 1940), also rendered as Chiungtze C. Tsen, which was used by himself, was a Chinese mathematician born in Nanchang, Jiangxi, who proved Tsen's theorem. He was one of Emmy Noether's students at the University of Göttingen. He returned to China in 1935. After the full-scale Japanese invasion of China in 1937, he fled and eventually settled in Xikang, where he became a professor at the newly-founded National Xikang Institute of Technology. He died of a stomach ulcer in Xichang, Xikang on October 1, 1940, and a memorial service was held on November 18, 1940. (Many Chinese sources mistakenly give his date of death as November 1940.)

One of his research interests was quasi-algebraic closure. In that area he proved the theorem that took his name (Tsen's theorem).

Publications

  • Tsen, Chiungtze C. Divisionsalgebren über Funktionenkörpern. Nachr. Ges. Wiss. Göttingen, Math.-Phys. Kl. I, No.44, II, No.48, 335-339 (1933).
  • Tsen, Chiungtze C. Algebren über Funktionenkörpern. Göttingen: Diss. 19 S. (1934).
  • Tsen, Chiungtze C. Zur Stufentheorie der quasialgebraisch-Abgeschlossenheit kommutativer Körper. J. Chin. Math. Soc. 1, 81-92 (1936).
  • References

    Chiungtze C. Tsen Wikipedia