Carl-Gustav Esseen

Carl-Gustav Esseen (September 18, 1918, Linköping[1] – November 10, 2001) was a Swedish mathematician. His work was in the theory of probability. The Berry–Esseen theorem is named after him.[2]

Life

Carl-Gustav Esseen attended school in Linköping. Starting in 1936, he studied mathematics, astronomy, physics and chemistry at the University of Uppsala. Inspired by the harmonic-analytic research of Harald Cramér and Arne Beurling, Esseen examined the accuracy of the approximation to the normal distribution in the central limit theorem in the case of independent and identically distributed summands. Esseen's bound is now called "the Berry-Esseen theorem", because it was independently proved by Andrew C. Berry, also.[2]

In 1944 Esseen received his doctorate with a thesis on the Fourier analysis of probability distributions. In 1949 he was appointed full professor of applied mathematics at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm. In 1962 his professorship moved to the field of mathematical statistics and in 1967, he became first holder of the chair of mathematical statistics at the University of Uppsala. He retired in 1984.[2][3]

Scientific work

Although Esseen worked mostly on the central limit theorem and related topics, he also worked in other areas. Some industrial applications were considered in his writings, for example, his studies on control theory and in telecommunications. After retirement, Esseen worked on topics from number theory, especially factorization, a topic of importance in cryptology.[2]

Esseen supervised several doctoral students. His lectures and writings were meticulously prepared and delivered.

Honours

Selected works

References

  1. "Esseen, Carl-Gustaf H:son" in Who's Who 1969
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Carl-Gustav Esseen, Bernoulli News, Newsletter of the Bernoulli Society for Mathematical Statistics and Probability 9, #1 (May 2002).
  3. A brief history of the professors at the department of Mathematics, department of mathematics, KTH Royal Institute of Technology. Accessed on line April 28, 2010.

External links

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