Zygmund, Antoni

Zygmund, Antoni

(äntô`nē zĭg`mo͞ont), 1900–1992, Polish-American mathematician, b. Warsaw, Ph.D. Univ. of Warsaw, 1923. In 1940 he escaped from German-controlled Poland to the United States. He served in a number of posts before he was appointed to the faculty at the Univ. of Chicago in 1947 and remained there until he retired in 1980. At Chicago, Zygmund created a major analysis research center. With his protégé Alberto CalderónCalderón, Alberto
, 1920–98, Argentine mathematician, b. Mendoza, Argentina, grad. Univ. of Buenos Aires (B.S. 1947), Univ. of Chicago (Ph.D. 1950). He is known for his contributions to mathematical analysis and the development of singular integrals, which are
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 he formulated the Calderón-Zygmund theory of singular integral operators and inspired the Calderón-Zygmund, or Chicago, school of mathematicians devoted to their study. His work in harmonic analysis has application in the theory of waves and vibrations. He also did major work in Fourier analysis and its application to partial differential equations. His book Trigonometric Series (1935) is a classic that, together with later editions, is still the definitive work on the subject. Other major works include Analytic Functions (1938) and Measure and Integral (1977).

Zygmund, Antoni

(1900– ) mathematician; born in Warsaw, Poland. Fleeing Nazism, he emigrated to America (1940) where he taught longest at the University of Chicago (1964). A National Academy of Sciences member and recipient of the National Medal of Science (1986), he did pioneering research in hard analysis. He wrote six books and over 180 papers.