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Arnold Emch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arnold F. Emch (24 March 1871 – 1959) was an American mathematician, known for his work on the inscribed square problem.

Emch received his Ph.D. in 1895 at the University of Kansas under the supervision of Henry Byron Newson.[1][2] In the late 1890s until 1905, he was an assistant professor of graphic mathematics in the school of engineering at the Kansas State Agricultural College (now Kansas State University).[3] In 1905, Emch became a professor of mathematics at the Kantonsschule in Solothurn, Switzerland.[4] In 1908, Emch gave a lecture at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Rome.[4] From 1911 to 1939, he was a professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.[5]

His wife was Hilda Walters Emch (1875–1962)[6] and they had two sons, Walter Emch and Arnold Frederick Emch (1899–1989), a well-known management consultant.[7]

Selected publications

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References

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  1. ^ Arnold Emch at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. ^ Henry Byron Newson was the husband of Mary Frances Winston Newson.
  3. ^ Walters, John Daniel (1909). History of the Kansas State Agricultural College. Printing Department of the Kansas state agricultural college, 1909. pp. 123.
  4. ^ a b "Arnold Emch". The Graduate Magazine of the University of Kansas. Vol. 8. 1908. p. 277.
  5. ^ Arnold Emch Papers, 1901–1954; University of Illinois Archives
  6. ^ Hilda Walters Emch, findagrave.com
  7. ^ Arnold Frederick Emch (1899–1989) was the author of the 1965 book Uncommon letters to a son.
  8. ^ Wilson, E. B. (1905). "Review: Introduction to Projective Geometry and Its Applications by Arnold Emch" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 12 (3): 132–133. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1905-01305-7.
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