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         Lefschetz Solomon:     more books (68)
  1. Non-commutative Geometry in Mathematics and Physics: The XI Solomon Lefschetz Memorial Lecture Series and Topics in Deformation Quantization and Non-commutative ... 2005 Mexico City (Contemporary Mathematics)
  2. Topics in Topology. (AM-10) (Annals of Mathematics Studies) by Solomon Lefschetz, 1942-12-31
  3. Topology (Colloquium Publications) by Solomon Lefschetz, 1930-12-31
  4. Lectures on Differential Equations. (AM-14) (Annals of Mathematics Studies) by Solomon Lefschetz, 1985-01-01
  5. Algebraic Geometry by Solomon Lefschetz, 2005-12-27
  6. Introduction to Topology by Solomon Lefschetz, 1954
  7. Selected papers. Including the book L'Analysis Situs by Solomon Lefschetz, 1971
  8. Contributions to the Theory of Nonlinear Oscillations, Volume V. (AM-45) (Annals of Mathematics Studies, Number 45)
  9. Differential Equations: Geometric Theory (Phoenix Edition) 2nd Edition by Solomon Lefschetz, 2005-09-14
  10. Algebraic Topology (Colloquium Pbns. Series, Vol 27) by Solomon Lefschetz, Solomon Lefschetz, 1980
  11. Hochschullehrer (University of Kansas): Solomon Lefschetz, Henry Sheldon Fitch, Junius F. Brown, Fritz Heider, Edward Harrison Taylor (German Edition)
  12. Solomon Lefschetz: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i>
  13. Introduction to non-linear mechanics: By N. Kryloff and N. Bogoliuboff ; a free translation by Solomon Lefschetz of excerpts from two Russian monographs (Annals of mathematics studies) by N. M Krylov, 1949
  14. Algebraic Topology. by Solomon Lefschetz, 1942

1. Graph Theory White Pages Solomon Lefschetz
Solomon Lefschetz. 18841972 http//www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Lefschetz.htmlPh.D. 1911 Clark; William
http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~sanders/graphtheory/people/Lefschetz.S.html

2. Lefschetz
Solomon Lefschetz. Here's to Lefschetz, Solomon L. Irrepressible as hellWhen he's at last beneath the sod He'll then begin to heckle God.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Lefschetz.html
Solomon Lefschetz
Born: 3 Sept 1884 in Moscow, Russia
Died: 5 Oct 1972 in Princeton, New Jersey, USA
Click the picture above
to see two larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Solomon Lefschetz was a Russian born, Jewish mathematician who was the main source of the algebraic aspects of topology . His father Alexander Lefschetz and his mother Vera were both Turkish citizens but since Alexander Lefschetz worked as an importer he was required to travel a great deal. As a consequence the family decided to make a base for themselves in France where their children could be educated. Shortly after Solomon was born his family set up home in Paris. Since Lefschetz was educated in France from a young age, French was his first language. He trained to be an engineer at the Ecole Centrale in Paris from 1902 to 1905 and there attended lectures by Emile Picard and Paul Appell . However, not being a French citizen he would have found great difficulty obtaining an academic post in France. Fully understanding this, in November 1905 at the age of 21, Lefschetz went to the United States. For a few months he worked at the Baldwin Locomotive works, then from 1907 to 1910 he worked for Westinghouse Electric Company in Pittsburgh. He had the misfortune to lose both his hands in a laboratory accident in November 1907 when they were burnt off in a transformer explosion. He also lost his forearms and spent a while in hospital.

3. Lefschetz, Solomon
Lefschetz, Solomon. Title Differential Equations Geometric Theory SubjectScience Author lefschetz solomon Mirsky, Lawrence An Introducti
http://www.books-including.com/Lefschetz-Solomon/Differential-Equations-Geometri
Lefschetz, Solomon
Title: Differential Equations: Geometric Theory
Subject: Science
Author: Lefschetz Solomon
Mirsky, Lawrence An Introducti...

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4. SOLOMON LEFSCHETZ
Solomon Lefschetz. Solomon Lefschetz (18841972) did pioneering workin algebraic geometry, algebraic topology, and differential
http://www.usna.edu/Users/math/meh/lefschetz.html
Solomon Lefschetz
Solomon Lefschetz (1884-1972) did pioneering work in algebraic geometry, algebraic topology, and differential equations, and exerted tremendous influence over American mathematics as a professor at Princeton University and the editor of the journal Annals of Mathematics Lefschetz was born in Moscow into a Jewish family. His father had frequent business in Persia, and usually based his family in Paris. At age 21 Lefschetz emigrated to the United States. He worked briefly at the Baldwin Locomotive Works, then for Westinghouse Electric Company in Pittsburg from 1907 to 1910. His industrial career was cut short by an accident in which he lost both his hands. Lefschetz started over as a mathematician, receiving his doctorate from Clark University in 1911. Lefschetz accepted a position at the University of Nebraska, then moved to the University of Kansas. Despite heavy teaching demands and near-complete isolation from other research mathematicians, he produced research papers of striking originality and importance. (He later wrote that his position "enabled me to develop my ideas in perfect mathematical calm".) In 1924 he went to Princeton as a visiting professor, and his post was made permanent the next year. Lefschetz became Henry Fine research professor in 1932 and retained that post until his retirement from Princeton in 1953. Lefschetz began his research by studying algebraic varieties (sets defined by the vanishing of polynomials). He applied to them the ideas of algebraic topology invented by

5. Lefschetz, Solomon Differential Equations: Geometric Theory
Theory. Title Differential Equations Geometric Theory Subject ScienceAuthor lefschetz solomon Wilson, Anne Classic Essential
http://www.you-read.com/Lefschetz-Solomon/Differential-Equations-Geometric-Theor
Lefschetz, Solomon Differential Equations: Geometric Theory
Title: Differential Equations: Geometric Theory
Subject: Science
Author: Lefschetz Solomon
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6. ITU Library Services
Lefrand, E. 4. Lefrant, Serge, 1947, 2002, 1. Lefschetz, Solomon, 1961, 1. Lefschetz,Solomon, 1884-1972, / ed. 4. Leftwich, Richard H, 3. Legat, Arthur Watson. 1948,1.
http://divit.library.itu.edu.tr/search*tur/aLefschetz, Solomon, 1884-1972,/alefs
Istanbul Technical University Libraries
Yazar Baþlýk Konu Kelime Dergi Adý Tez No. Yer No ISSN/ISBN Resmi Dok # OCLC No Yakýn Yazarlar þunlardýr: Yýl Bulunan Lefkowitz, Bernard Lefkowitz, Murray Lefort, Daniel Lefrand, E. ... Legault, Râejean, 1956-

7. Solomon Lefschetz: Artículo De La Enciclopedia Libre
las dos manos en un accidente, comenzó a interesarse por las matemáticas
http://enciclopedia.us.es/wiki.phtml?title=Solomon Lefschetz

8. Lefschetz, Solomon Science
Lefschetz, Solomon Science. Title Differential Equations Geometric Theory SubjectScience Author lefschetz solomon Moran, Joseph J. Collaborative
http://www.some-books.com/Lefschetz-Solomon/Differential-Equations-Geometric-The
Lefschetz, Solomon Science
Title: Differential Equations: Geometric Theory
Subject: Science
Author: Lefschetz Solomon
Moran, Joseph J. Collaborative...

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9. Lefschetz, Solomon Science
Lefschetz, Solomon Science. Title Differential Equations Geometric Theory SubjectScience Author lefschetz solomon Bob Ray A Night Of Two Sta
http://www.ultrabooks.com/Lefschetz-Solomon/Differential-Equations-Geometric-The
Lefschetz, Solomon Science
Title: Differential Equations: Geometric Theory
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Author: Lefschetz Solomon
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10. Pagina Nueva 1
Translate this page En honor a Solomon lefschetz solomon Lefschetz, (1884 – 1972) recibió el gradode Ingeniero en Artes y Manufacturas por la Ecole Centrale en París en 1905.
http://www.mat.uson.mx/concurso/main.htm
XXXIII Concurso Regional de Física y Matemáticas Organizado por los Departamentos de Física y de Matemáticas de la Universidad de Sonora Se llevará a cabo en Hermosillo, Sonora los días 7, 8 y 9 de mayo de 2001 en las instalaciones del Departamento de Matemáticas, Edificio 3K de la Universidad de Sonora. Se convoca a los alumnos inscritos en el nivel medio superior de alguna institución de los estados de Baja California, Baja California Sur, Chihuahua, Sinaloa y Sonora. En honor a Solomon Lefschetz Solomon Lefschetz, (1884 – 1972) recibió el grado de Ingeniero en Artes y Manufacturas por la Ecole Centrale en París en 1905. Emigrado a los Estados Unidos trabajó hasta 1910 en la Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co. de Pittsburgh, año en que un accidente terminó abruptamente su carrera de ingeniero. Decidió entonces hacer su carrera en Matemáticas, obteniendo su doctorado en 1911 en Clark University (Worcester, Mass.). Después de diversas posiciones llegó en 1924 a Princeton donde permaneció hasta su retiro en 1953. Sus aportaciones matemáticas se extienden por un período de más de 60 años y sus publicaciones sobrepasan el centenar. Sus contribuciones de mayor influencia fueron en:

11. AMS Online Books/COLL27
Published by the AMS, available for free download as PDF files.
http://www.ams.org/online_bks/coll27/
Title List Help AMS Home AMS Bookstore
Algebraic Topology by Solomon Lefschetz Publication Date: 1942
Number of Pages: 389 pp.
Publisher: AMS
ISBN: 0-8218-3397-9
COLL/27.E
Download Individual Chapters FREE (10 files - 41.5mb)
Frontmatter
Title Contents Preface
  • Introduction to General Topology
    Additive Groups

    Complexes

    Complexes: Products. Transformations. Subdivisions
    ...
  • Endmatter
    Appendices
    Bibliography and Indexes
    Comments: webmaster@ams.org Privacy Statement

    12. References For Lefschetz
    References for solomon lefschetz. Articles J Adem, A sketch of solomon lefschetz'slife in Mexico (Spanish), Differential equations, Math. Notes and Sympos.
    http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Lefschetz.html
    References for Solomon Lefschetz
  • Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990). Articles:
  • J Adem, A sketch of Solomon Lefschetz's life in Mexico (Spanish), Differential equations, Math. Notes and Sympos. (Mexico City, 1976), 1-7.
  • D J Albers and G L Alexanderson (eds.), Mathematical People: Profiles and Interviews (Boston, 1985), 349-352.
  • R C Archibald, A semicentennial history of the American Mathematical Society 1888-1938 (New York, 1980), 236-240.
  • R F Brown, Fixed Point Theorems, in History of Topology (Oxford, 1999), 271-300.
  • Rend. Circ. Mat. Palermo (2) Suppl.
  • P Griffiths, D C Spencer and G W Whitehead, Solomon Lefschetz, Biographical Memoirs. National Academy of Sciences
  • J K Hale, Foreword: Solomon Lefschetz (1884-1972) and Joseph Pierre LaSalle (1916-1983), Modern optimal control, Lecture Notes in Pure and Appl. Math. ( New York, 1989), iii-iv.
  • W Hodge, Solomon Lefschetz, Bull. London Math. Soc.
  • W Hodge, Solomon Lefschetz, 1884-1972, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows Roy. Soc. London
  • W Hodge, Solomon Lefschetz
  • 13. Solomon Lefschetz, Undaunted Genius
    The following article about solomon lefschetz by Kristina Nilson Allen appeared in Clark News, volume 11, number 1, January 1988, page 9.
    http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/lefschetz_kna.html
    The following article about Solomon Lefschetz by Kristina Nilson Allen appeared in Clark News , volume 11, number 1, January 1988, page 9.
    Undaunted Genius
    The launching of Sputnik in 1957 galvanized the United States and brought one of America's greatest mathematicians, Solomon Lefschetz, out of retirement to pick up the gauntlet hurled from outer space. Lefschetz, who had received his doctorate from Clark in 1911, had been studying closely the research of Russian scientists. He was certain that the Soviets' superior knowledge of nonlinear differential equations (which deal with the laws of natural motion) had given them the edge in rocket control systems. Lefschetz convinced the Martin Company, an aircraft manufacturer, to set up a mathematics research center as part of their independent Research Institute for Advanced Study in Baltimore. In a year, Lefschetz was directing the research of 17 scientists focused on nonlinear differential equations. It was the largest group of mathematicians in the Western world to tackle such a project. This project culminated a career which had brought Lefschetz worldwide recognition for outstanding contributions to the fields of algebraic geometry, topology (the geometry of form without size or shape) and nonlinear differential equations. Ironically, Lefschetz turned to mathematics only after an accident curtailed a career in engineering. Born in Moscow in 1884 and raised in Paris, Lefschetz had earned his degree in 1905 in mechanical engineering at the Ecole Centrale. In 1907 he began work as an engineer with Westinghouse Electrical and Manufacturing Company in Pittsburgh, but at age 23, Lefschetz lost both hands and forearms in an electrical experiment accident.

    14. Lefschetz
    Biography of solomon lefschetz (18841972) solomon lefschetz. Born 3 Sept 1884 in Moscow, Russia
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Lefschetz.html
    Solomon Lefschetz
    Born: 3 Sept 1884 in Moscow, Russia
    Died: 5 Oct 1972 in Princeton, New Jersey, USA
    Click the picture above
    to see two larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
    Solomon Lefschetz was a Russian born, Jewish mathematician who was the main source of the algebraic aspects of topology . His father Alexander Lefschetz and his mother Vera were both Turkish citizens but since Alexander Lefschetz worked as an importer he was required to travel a great deal. As a consequence the family decided to make a base for themselves in France where their children could be educated. Shortly after Solomon was born his family set up home in Paris. Since Lefschetz was educated in France from a young age, French was his first language. He trained to be an engineer at the Ecole Centrale in Paris from 1902 to 1905 and there attended lectures by Emile Picard and Paul Appell . However, not being a French citizen he would have found great difficulty obtaining an academic post in France. Fully understanding this, in November 1905 at the age of 21, Lefschetz went to the United States. For a few months he worked at the Baldwin Locomotive works, then from 1907 to 1910 he worked for Westinghouse Electric Company in Pittsburgh. He had the misfortune to lose both his hands in a laboratory accident in November 1907 when they were burnt off in a transformer explosion. He also lost his forearms and spent a while in hospital.

    15. Lefschetz, Solomon
    lefschetz, solomon (18841972) came to the United States in 1907 as an engineer, but turned to mathematics when he lost both hands in an accident while working for the Westinghouse Company.
    http://mondrian.princeton.edu/CampusWWW/Companion/lefschetz_solomon.html
    Lefschetz, Solomon
    Lefschetz, Solomon (1884-1972) came to the United States in 1907 as an engineer, but turned to mathematics when he lost both hands in an accident while working for the Westinghouse Company. He eventually became world renowned for his contributions to the topological study of all algebraic geometry and the algebraic study of topology. At Princeton, as Fine Professor and department chairman, he carried on where Fine, Eisenhart, and Veblen left off in making Fine Hall world-famous as a center for mathematics. He was born in Moscow and grew up in Paris, where he graduated from the cole Centrale in 1905 with a degree in mechanical engineering. Following the accident, in 1910 he won a fellowship in mathematics at Clark University and gained his Ph.D. there after only one year. He came to Princeton in 1924 from the University of Kansas, was named Fine Professor in 1933 and appointed department chairman in 1945; he continued in both offices until his retirement in 1953. Lefschetz was brought to Princeton by Dean Fine as part of a continuing effort to develop a first-rate mathematics department. After the newly founded Institute for Advanced Study took James W. Alexander II, Oswald Veblen, and John von Neumann from the University in the early 1930s, Lefschetz supplied the creative drive that maintained the department's research strength and the energy and imagination that led it to new heights. As chairman, the University Orator later said in presenting him for an honorary degree, he ruled ``with some pepper, much salt, and an invigorating and impetuous impishness.'' Under Lefschetz's dynamic guidance the

    16. Lefschetz, Solomon
    lefschetz, solomon. lefschetz, solomon (18841972) came to the UnitedStates in 1907 as an engineer, but turned to mathematics when
    http://etc.princeton.edu/CampusWWW/Companion/lefschetz_solomon.html
    Lefschetz, Solomon
    Lefschetz, Solomon (1884-1972) came to the United States in 1907 as an engineer, but turned to mathematics when he lost both hands in an accident while working for the Westinghouse Company. He eventually became world renowned for his contributions to the topological study of all algebraic geometry and the algebraic study of topology. At Princeton, as Fine Professor and department chairman, he carried on where Fine, Eisenhart, and Veblen left off in making Fine Hall world-famous as a center for mathematics. He was born in Moscow and grew up in Paris, where he graduated from the cole Centrale in 1905 with a degree in mechanical engineering. Following the accident, in 1910 he won a fellowship in mathematics at Clark University and gained his Ph.D. there after only one year. He came to Princeton in 1924 from the University of Kansas, was named Fine Professor in 1933 and appointed department chairman in 1945; he continued in both offices until his retirement in 1953. Lefschetz was brought to Princeton by Dean Fine as part of a continuing effort to develop a first-rate mathematics department. After the newly founded Institute for Advanced Study took James W. Alexander II, Oswald Veblen, and John von Neumann from the University in the early 1930s, Lefschetz supplied the creative drive that maintained the department's research strength and the energy and imagination that led it to new heights. As chairman, the University Orator later said in presenting him for an honorary degree, he ruled ``with some pepper, much salt, and an invigorating and impetuous impishness.'' Under Lefschetz's dynamic guidance the

    17. Mathematics
    to all mathematicians; James W. Alexander II (BS Princeton 1910, Ph.D. 1915), thetopologist; and solomon lefschetz, the algebraic geometer and topologist.
    http://etc.princeton.edu/CampusWWW/Companion/mathematics.html
    Mathematics
    Mathematics has been prominent in the Princeton curriculum since the founding of the College. In 1760, entering students were required to have an understanding of the rules of arithmetic, and underclassmen learned algebra, trigonometry, geometry, and conic sections. In 1853 a Boston newspaper reported that at Princeton the study of mathematics was carried on ``to an extent not excelled by any other college in the country.'' In the early years, instruction in mathematics was given by faculty members who generally taught other subjects as well. The first trained mathematician on the faculty was Walter Minto, who had studied in Pisa and had taught in Edinburgh before being called to Princeton in 1787. Not until a century later did the College again have on its faculty teachers who had studied in the European mathematical centers; the first was Henry Burchard Fine (A.B. Princeton 1880), who received his Ph.D. degree at Leipzig in 1885. Under the chairmanship, from 1929 to 1945, of Fine's successor, Luther P. Eisenhart, the department continued to make outstanding appointments of promising young mathematicians, such as Alonzo Church, a noted logician; Eugene P. Wigner, Thomas D. Jones Professor of Mathematical Physics and later a Nobel laureate; Salomon Bochner, known for the breadth of his contributions to many different areas of analysis; and Samuel S. Wilks, a distinguished mathematical statistician. With the permanent mathematical faculties and visiting members of the University and the Institute, Princeton became an intensely active center for mathematical research in the 1930s. Reporting on an International Congress of Mathematicians held in Oslo in 1936, a Norwegian newspaper ran this headline: ``Princeton is the mathematical center of the world but at the moment it is in Oslo.''

    18. The Mathematical Heritage Of Henri Poincaré - (American Mathematical Society Bo
    midtwentieth century, it is through American mathematicians as well as French thatthis influence flows, through GD Birkhoff, solomon lefschetz, and Marston
    http://www.ams.org/bookstore/idx/PSPUM-39.html
    The Mathematical Heritage of Henri Poincare
    Edited by: Felix E. Browder Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ
    Description
    Contents

    Part 1. Section 1, Geometry
    • S.-S. Chern Web geometry J. Milnor Hyperbolic geometry: The first 150 years A. Weinstein Symplectic geometry
    Section 2, Topology
    • J. F. Adams Graeme Segal's Burnside ring conjecture W. P. Thurston Three dimensional manifolds, Kleinian groups and hyperbolic geometry
    Section 3, Riemann surfaces, discontinuous groups and Lie groups
    • D. Sullican Discrete conformal groups and measurable dynamics
    Section 4, Several complex variables
    • R. Penrose Physical space-time and nonrealizable CR-structures R. O. Wells, Jr. The Cauchy-Riemann equations and differential geometry
    Part 2. Section 5, Topological methods in nonlinear problems
    • R. Bott Lectures on Morse theory, old and new H. Brezis Periodic solutions of nonlinear vibrating strings and duality principles F. E. Browder Fixed point theory and nonlinear problems L. Nirenberg Variational and topological methods in nonlinear problems

    19. MSN Learning & Research - Search Results - Solomon
    lefschetz, solomon (18841972), Russian American engineer and mathematician, a pioneer in developing the algebraic
    http://encarta.msn.com/teleport/fromTools/find.asp?brand=elibrary&q1=Solomon

    20. BIBCYT Autor: Alejandría BE 4.7.1.7r
    Translate this page Autor lefschetz, solomon, (Comienzo). 1, QA564 L43 1953 lefschetz, solomonAlgebraic Geometry Priceton University Press, New Jersey, ESTADOS UNIDOS.
    http://bibcyt.ucla.edu.ve/cgi-win/be_alex.exe?Autor=Lefschetz, Solomon&Nombrebd=

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