Pia Nalli

Pia Maria Nalli (February 10, 1886 – September 27, 1964) was an Italian mathematician who struggled against discrimination against women in the Italian university hiring system. Her research interests ranged from algebraic geometry to functional analysis and tensor analysis; she was a speaker at the 1928 International Congress of Mathematicians. A street in Rome is named after her.

Life and academic career

Early life and education

Nalli was born on February 10, 1886, in Palermo, to a middle-class family with seven children.[1] She studied at the University of Palermo, where she obtained a laurea in 1910 under the supervision of Giuseppe Bagnera,[2] with a thesis concerning algebraic geometry, and in the same year joined the Circolo Matematico di Palermo.[1]

After finishing her studies, Nalli assisted Bagnera in Palermo in 1911, and then began working as a school teacher. She completed a habilitation thesis in 1914 on the theory of integrals, and continued to work on Fourier analysis and Dirichlet series for the next several years.[1]

Academic career

Nalli served as assistant to Giuseppe Bagnera at the University of Palermo from 1 April 1911 to 16 November 1911. She then taught at a number of secondary schools, first in the girls' school at Avellino, then in Trapani, and from 16 November 1912 in the girls' technical school in Palermo. During this time Nalli continued her research, completing her thesis Esposizione e confronto critico delle diverse definizioni proposte per l'integrale definito di una funzione limitata o no, a study of the theory of the integral based on recent work on the subject by Émile Borel, Henri Lebesgue Charles de la Vallée Poussin, Giuseppe Vitali and Arnaud Denjoy.[1]

In 1921, Nalli became extraordinary professor at the University of Cagliari. She had been ranked second to Mauro Picone in the competition for the position, possibly in part because she was female, but Picone chose to stay at the University of Catania and become head of mathematics there, so the Cagliari position fell to Nalli. In 1923, she was listed first in a search for a position at the University of Pavia, but not offered the position. Finally, after similar mistreatment from several other universities, she moved to the University of Catania as a full professor in 1927. At around this time, perhaps encouraged by Tullio Levi-Civita, she switched her research focus from functional analysis to tensor calculus.[1]

She was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1928.[3]

Death and legacy

Nalli died on September 27, 1964, in Catania. A street in Rome, the Via Pia Nalli,[4] is named after her.[1]

Selected works

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 18, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.