The Full Wiki



More info on Michael Fekete

Michael Fekete: Wikis

  

Note: Many of our articles have direct quotes from sources you can cite, within the Wikipedia article! This article doesn't yet, but we're working on it! See more info or our list of citable articles.

Encyclopedia

Michael (Mihály) Fekete
Born July 19, 1886(1886-07-19)
Senta, Banat, Austria-Hungary
Died May 13, 1957 (aged 70)
Israel
Residence Israel
Nationality Israel
Ethnicity Jewish
Fields Mathematics
Institutions Budapest University
Hebrew University
Alma mater Budapest University
Doctoral advisor Lipót Fejér
Doctoral students Aryeh Dvoretzky
Amnon Jakimovski
Michael Bahir Maschler
Menahem Max Schiffer
Known for Fekete polynomial
Notable awards Israel Prize for Exact Sciences (1955)
Religious stance Jewish

Michael (Mihály) Fekete (Hebrew: מיכאל פקטה‎; July 19, 1886May 13, 1957) was an Israeli-Hungarian mathematician, and the winner of the 1955 Israel Prize for Exact Sciences.

Michael Fekete was born in 1886 in Senta, Austria-Hungary (today Serbia) and received his PhD in 1909 from the Budapest University (later renamed to Eötvös Loránd University), under the stewardship of Lipót Fejér, among whose students were great mathematicians such as Paul Erdős, John von Neumann, Pál Turán and George Pólya. After completing his PhD he left to Georg-August University of Göttingen, which in those days was considered a mathematics hub, and subsequently returned to the University of Budapest, where he attained the title of Privatdozent. In addition, Fekete engaged in private mathematics tutoring. Among his students was János Neumann, who, was later known in the United States as John von Neumann. In 1922, Fekete published a paper together with von Neumann in the subject of transfinite diameter. This was von Neumann's first scientific paper. Fekete dedicated the majority of his scientific work to this subject.

In 1928 he immigrated to Israel and was among the first instructors in the Institute of Mathematics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In 1929 he was promoted to professor in the institute. Eventually he succeeded the famous mathematicians Edmund Landau and Adolf Abraham Halevi Fraenkel in heading the institute. He later moved on to become the dean of Natural Sciences, and between the years 1946–1948 he was Hebrew University Provost.

Among his students were Aryeh Dvoretzky, Amnon Jakimovski and Michael Bahir Maschler.

See also

External links








Got something to say? Make a comment.
Your name
Your email address
Message
Please enter the solution to case below
12+8=