Jump to content

Boris Korenblum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boris Korenblum
Борис Исаакович Коренблюм
Born(1923-08-12)August 12, 1923
Odessa, Soviet Union (now Ukraine)
DiedDecember 15, 2011(2011-12-15) (aged 88)
Slingerlands, New York, United States
Alma materInstitute of Mathematics, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Moscow State University
Known forHarmonic analysis, functional analysis, Banach algebras, complex analysis
AwardsOrder of the Red Banner
Scientific career
FieldsMathematical analysis
InstitutionsTel Aviv University, Institute for Advanced Study, University at Albany, SUNY
Doctoral advisorEvgeny Yakovlevich Remez

Boris Isaac Korenblum (Борис Исаакович Коренблюм, 12 August 1923, Odessa, now Ukraine – 15 December 2011, Slingerlands, New York) was a Soviet-Israeli-American mathematician, specializing in mathematical analysis.[1][2]

Boris Korenblum was a child prodigy in music, languages, and mathematics. He started as a violinist at the famous School of Stolyarsky in Odessa. After he won a young mathematicians competition, the family was given an apartment in Kiev, an extraordinary event. Boris was given a mentor, a local mathematics professor, who would peremptorily supervise his course of self study. To the great chagrin of his mother, Boris decided against pursuing a music career. In June 1941, when the war began, he volunteered, not yet having reached the draft age, for the Soviet Army. Because of his fluency in German, he served in a reconnaissance unit. Some of his tasks was going to the enemy lines to capture a prisoner for interrogation. He was also the one to interpret to his commanding officers when a prisoner was taken. Once, refusing to beat a prisoner who was talking already, he quarrelled with the superior officer, and was punished by being sent to a penal battalion. There, he served with, and made fast wartime friends with, some rough characters, many of whom were discharged from penal colonies "to wash with their blood the offences against the Motherland." He later told his family that this experience, together with the inevitable maturing during a bloody war, made a man out of a soft city boy with a doting Jewish mother. After some time, the need for competent interpreters saw him return to his unit, where he served with distinction to the end of the war. His awards, including an Order of the Red Banner, were taken from him when he emigrated to Israel in November 1973.

Coming home from the war, he passed all the exams for the undergraduate degree in mathematics in a few of months, and was admitted for graduate study at the Institute of Mathematics of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine where he received in 1947 his Candidate of Sciences degree (PhD) under the direction of Evgeny Yakovlevich Remez.[3] Korenblum received in 1956 his Russian Doctorate of Sciences (habilitation) from Moscow State University. He was dismissed from the Institute of Mathematics at the height of the anti-Semitic campaign (together with all other Jewish and also half-Jewish scientists) around 1952, and afterwards became a Professor of Mathematics at the Institute of Civil Engineering thanks to heroic efforts by Professor Yury Dmitrievich Sokolov (1896–1971). (In the political atmosphere of the time, Sokolov risked the loss of his own position.) Boris Korenblum worked there until his emigration to Israel.

From 1974 to 1977 Korenblum was a professor of mathematics at Tel Aviv University.[4] In 1977 he was at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.[5] He was a professor at the University at Albany, SUNY from 1977 until his retirement in 2009 as professor emeritus.[4]

Korenblum's research dealt with classical harmonic analysis, functional analysis, Banach algebras, and complex analysis. He was an Invited Speaker at the ICM in 1978 in Helsinki.[6] In November 2003 a conference was held in Barcelona to celebrate the occasion of his 80th birthday.[4][7][8] He is survived by his wife, his children, and a granddaughter.

Selected publications

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Zhu, Kehe (21 November 2008). "The Mathematics of Boris Korenblum" (PDF).
  2. ^ Petry, Greta (February 2004). "Celebrating Mathematics: A Birthday to Remember". Campus News, U. of Albany, SUNY.
  3. ^ Boris Korenblum at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. ^ a b c Zhu, Kehe (2004). "Univ. at Albany: Math: Boris Korenblum". math.albany.edu.
  5. ^ "Boris Korenblum, Institute for Advanced Study". ias.edu. 9 December 2019.
  6. ^ Korenblum, Boris. "Analytic functions of unbounded characteristic and Beurling algebras." In Proceedings of International Congress of Mathematicians, Helsinki, 1978, vol. 2, pp. 653–658
  7. ^ Seip, Kristian. "Opening words, Korenblum Fiesta, Barcelona, November 20–22, 2003".
  8. ^ Borichev, Alexander; Hedenmalm, Håkan; Zhu, Kehe (2006). "Bergman spaces and related topics in complex analysis : proceedings of a conference in honor of Boris Korenblum's 80th birthday". National Library of Australia. (book description)
  9. ^ Richter, Stefan (2002). "Review of Theory of Bergman spaces by H. Hedenmalm, B. Korenblum, and K. Zhu". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.). 39: 121–127. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-01-00927-2.
[edit]