Alfred Barneck

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alfred Barneck , until 1923 Alfred Baruch , (born September 11, 1885 in Berlin , † 1964 ) was a German mathematician.

Life

Barneck studied mathematics and physics at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Berlin and the TH Berlin-Charlottenburg from 1904 to 1908 and was then in the preparatory service for the teaching post at higher schools. During this time he received his doctorate in 1910 under Georg Cantor in Halle (on the differential relations between the theta functions of an argument). In 1919 he completed his habilitation at the TH Charlottenburg. When the National Socialists came to power in 1934, he lost his license to teach as a Jew. He was a private lecturer in descriptive geometry and worked on the revision course for higher analysis (volume 1, 1927), in which he revised and added to the chapter on elliptic functions and integrals by Eugen Jahnke . His main occupation was from 1911 to study at a grammar school in Berlin. In 1938 he was forced to resign from the Berlin Mathematical Society . From 1945 to 1951 he was senior director of studies in Berlin.

Fonts

  • The foundations of our era, Teubner 1932

literature

  • Maximilian Pinl Colleagues in a Dark Time , DMV Annual Report, Volume 71, 1969, p. 173

References and comments

  1. ↑ Date of death according to Winfried Scharlau, Mathematical Institutes in Germany 1800–1945, 2013, p. 23
  2. Alfred Barneck in the Mathematics Genealogy Project (English)Template: MathGenealogyProject / Maintenance / id used
  3. ^ Eberhard Knobloch, Mathematics at the Berliner Technische Hochschule, in David Rowe, John McCleary, The History of Modern Mathematics, Volume 2, Academic Press 1989, p. 266
  4. ^ Exhibition on the 200th anniversary of the Bauakademie's founding, list of scientists expelled by TH Berlin