Ernst Witt
Ernst Witt | |
---|---|
Ernst Witt in Nice, 1970 | |
Born |
Alsen, German Empire (present-day Denmark) | June 26, 1911
Died |
July 3, 1991 80) Hamburg, Germany | (aged
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | University of Hamburg |
Alma mater | University of Göttingen |
Doctoral advisor | Emmy Noether |
Doctoral students | Walter Borho, Günter Harder |
Known for | Witt algebra, Witt group, Hasse–Witt matrix, Bourbaki–Witt theorem, Poincaré–Birkhoff–Witt theorem, Witt's theorem, Witt vector |
Ernst Witt (June 26, 1911 – July 3, 1991) was a German mathematician, one of the leading algebraists of his time. He was born on the island of Als (German: Alsen). Shortly after his birth, he and his parents moved to China, and he did not return to Europe until he was nine.
After his schooling, Witt went to the University of Freiburg and the University of Göttingen. He joined the Nazi party and was an active party member.[1] Witt completed his Ph.D. at the University of Göttingen in 1934 with Emmy Noether and later became a lecturer. He was then a member of a team led by Helmut Hasse.
From 1937 until 1979, he taught at the University of Hamburg. He died in Hamburg in 1991.
Work
Witt's work has been highly influential. His invention of the Witt vectors clarifies and generalizes the structure of the p-adic numbers. It has become fundamental to p-adic Hodge theory.
Witt was the founder of the theory of quadratic forms over an arbitrary field. He proved several of the key results, including the Witt cancellation theorem. He defined the Witt ring of all quadratic forms over a field, now a central object in the theory.
The Poincaré-Birkhoff-Witt theorem is basic to the study of Lie algebras. In algebraic geometry, the Hasse-Witt matrix of an algebraic curve over a finite field determines the cyclic étale coverings of degree p of a curve in characteristic p.
In the 1970s, Witt claimed that in 1940 he discovered what would eventually be named the "Leech lattice" many years before John Leech discovered it in 1965, but Witt did not publish his discovery and the details of exactly what he did are unclear; see his collected works (Witt 1998, pp. 328–329).
See also
References
- ↑ According to Schappacher (letter in Mathematical Intelligencer 1996) it was most certainly him and not Oswald Teichmüller, who attended Emmy Noether's private seminar held in her house while wearing his SA-uniform.
- Kersten, Ina (1993), "Ernst Witt 1911-1991" (PDF), Jahresbericht der Deutschen Mathematiker-Vereinigung 95: 166–180
- Witt, Ernst (1998), Kersten, Ina, ed., Collected papers. Gesammelte Abhandlungen, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-3-540-57061-5, MR 1643949
External links
- O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Ernst Witt", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews.
- Ernst Witt at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
|