Allen R Miller

Allen R Miller
Born (1942-12-02)December 2, 1942
Brooklyn,NY, United States
Died August 15, 2010(2010-08-15) (aged 67)
Residence United States
Citizenship United States
Fields Mathematics
Institutions Ballistics Research Laboratory, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Naval Research Laboratory, George Washington University
Alma mater Brooklyn College, University of Maryland

Allen R Miller (1942–2010) was an American mathematician.

Miller was a major contributor to the field of special functions, especially confluent hypergeometric functions.

Biography

A native of Brooklyn, NY, Miller attended George W. Wingate High School and Brooklyn College, where he graduated in 1965 with a degree in Mathematics. Miller began his professional career at the Ballistics Research Laboratory at the Aberdeen Proving Ground where he worked with physicist Jane Dewey. In 1967 he moved to the Naval Research Laboratory where he developed high-fidelity mathematical models of interactions between physical systems and electromagnetic fields. Unlike most pure mathematicians of the time, Miller implemented simulations of his models on early supercomputers. In the 1970s Miller was recognized not only as a leading mathematician but also as an expert on the CRAY line of supercomputer.

Miller maintained an academic affiliation with George Washington University as an adjunct professor after retiring from the Naval Research Laboratory in 1991. He published actively until his death from a heart embolism on August 15, 2010.[1]

Special function theory

Miller made numerous contributions in the area of special functions and addressed several significant open problems. Notable among these include his work with Emanuel Vegh in formulating an exact closed-form solution for the specular grazing angle for a sphere, a problem which had been unsolved for almost 50 years.[2]

Mathematical models

The Miller-Brown-Vegh model (developed at NRL) is commonly used to describe scattering from the ocean surface. It has been adopted in the US Navy's models for propagation over the ocean and appears in the Radar Handbook.

Computer security and information theory

Miller, with Ira S. Moskowitz, made several contributions to the mathematical analysis of covert channels in computer security. In particular he showed how special functions could simplify the closed form for the Shannon channel capacity and how the difference of divergent series could also be used to express channel capacity in certain physical situations that arise in anonymity networks.[3][4][5]

Impact

Allen Miller published around 60 peer-reviewed journal articles and numerous other non-refereed technical reports and articles. His results have been applied in robotics,[6] computer graphics,[7] decision theory,[8] and sensors.[9] Miller received three Alan Berman Research Publication Awards from the Naval Research Laboratory.

Notes

  1. "Obituary". The Washington Post. September 8, 2010.
  2. Allen R Miller and Emanuel Vegh (1993). "Exact Result for the Grazing Angle of Specular Reflection from a Sphere". SIAM Review 35: 472–480. doi:10.1137/1035091.
  3. Ira S. Moskowitz and Allen R. Miller (1992). "The Channel Capacity of a Certain Noisy Timing Channel". IEEE Transactions on Information Theory 38: 1339–1344. doi:10.1109/18.144712.
  4. Allen R. Miller and Ira S. Moskowitz (1995). "Reduction of a Class of Fox-Wright Psi Functions for Certain Rational Parameters". Computer and Mathematics with Applications 30: 73–82. doi:10.1016/0898-1221(95)00165-u.
  5. Allen R. Miller and Ira S. Moskowitz (2006). "Differences of Sums Containing Products of Binomial Coefficients and their Logarithms". SIAM Review 48: 318–325. Bibcode:2006SIAMR..48..318M. doi:10.1137/S003614450444292X.
  6. R. Smith and A. Stevens and H. Durrant-Whyte (1995). "A Navigation System for Accurate Localization in the Vicinity of Underwater Structure". INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON UNMANNED UNTETHERED SUBMERSIBLE TECHNOLOGY 9: 209–219.
  7. K. Jacobs and A. Nielsen and J. Vesterbaek and C. Loscos (2009). "Coherent radiance capture of scenes under changing illumination conditions for relighting applications". The Visual Computer 26: 171–185. doi:10.1007/s00371-009-0360-2.
  8. A.R. Miller and M. Feuerman (1988). "A Note on Deriving a Result in Decision Theory". NRL Report ADA196230.
  9. J.S. Lee and K.W. Hoppel and S.W. Mango and A.R. Miller (1994). "Intensity and phase statistics of multilook polarimetric and interferometric SAR imagery". IEEE Trans. on Geoscience and Remote Sensing 32: 1017–1028.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, May 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.