Sheldon Axler: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|American mathematician}} |
{{short description|American mathematician}} |
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'''Sheldon Jay Axler''' (born 6 November 1949, [[Philadelphia]]) is an [[United States|American]] mathematician, professor of mathematics and the Dean of the College of Science and Engineering at [[San Francisco State University]]. He has made contributions to mathematics education, publishing several mathematics textbooks. |
'''Sheldon Jay Axler''' (born 6 November 1949, [[Philadelphia]]) is an [[United States|American]] mathematician, professor of mathematics and the Dean of the College of Science and Engineering at [[San Francisco State University]]. He has made contributions to mathematics education, publishing several mathematics textbooks. |
Revision as of 10:21, 15 August 2020
Sheldon Jay Axler (born 6 November 1949, Philadelphia) is an American mathematician, professor of mathematics and the Dean of the College of Science and Engineering at San Francisco State University. He has made contributions to mathematics education, publishing several mathematics textbooks.
He went to Palmetto High School at Miami, Florida (1967). He obtained his AB in mathematics with highest honors at Princeton University (1971) and his Ph.D. in mathematics, under professor Donald Sarason, from the University of California, Berkeley (1975, Dissertation: "Subalgebras of "). As a postdoc he was a C. L. E. Moore instructor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
He taught for many years and became a Full Professor at Michigan State University. In 1997 Axler moved to San Francisco State University where he became the Chair of the Mathematics Department.
Axler received the Lester R. Ford Award for expository writing in 1996 from the Mathematical Association of America. In the awarded paper, "Down With Determinants!", Axler shows "how linear algebra can be done better without determinants". [1] In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[2]
He was an Associate Editor of the American Mathematical Monthly and the Editor-in-Chief of the Mathematical Intelligencer.
Axler's book Linear Algebra Done Right eschews the use of determinants, in favor of other methods.
Books
- Linear Algebra Done Right, third edition, Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics, Springer, 2015 (twelfth printing, 2009).
- (with John E. McCarthy, and Donald Sarason) editors. Holomorphic Spaces, Cambridge University Press 1998.
- (with Paul Bourdon, and Wade Ramey) Harmonic Function Theory, second edition, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, Springer, 2001.
- Harmonic Function Theory software, a Mathematica package for symbolic manipulation of harmonic functions, version 7.00, released 1 January 2009 (previous versions released in 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2008).
- Precalculus: A Prelude to Calculus, Wiley, 2009 (third printing, 2010).
- (with Peter Rosenthal and Donald Sarason) editors. A Glimpse at Hilbert Space Operators, Birkhäuser, 2010.
- College Algebra, John Wiley & Sons 2011.
- Algebra & Trigonometry, John Wiley & Sons, January 2011.
References
- ^ Axler, Sheldon (1995). "Down with determinants!". Amer. Math. Monthly. 102 (2): 139–154. doi:10.2307/2975348. JSTOR 2975348.
- ^ List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2012-11-03.
External links
- Axler's Home Page
- Sheldon Axler at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- College of Science & Engineering Newsletter from San Francisco State University.
- Senior Fellow Sheldon Axler from California Council on Science and Technology.
- Author profile in the database zbMATH
- Use dmy dates from February 2011
- 20th-century American mathematicians
- 21st-century American mathematicians
- 1949 births
- Living people
- San Francisco State University faculty
- Fellows of the American Mathematical Society
- Princeton University alumni
- University of California, Berkeley faculty
- People from Miami
- Michigan State University faculty
- Mathematicians from Philadelphia