David Rees (mathematician)
David Rees (born May 29, 1918 in Abergavenny , Monmouthshire , Wales , † August 16, 2013 in Exeter , England ) was a British mathematician who studied commutative algebra .
Rees graduated from Cambridge University . During the Second World War he was involved in the successful deciphering of the German ENIGMA rotor key machine as a “codebreaker” in Bletchley Park, England, in “Hut 6” (German: Baracke 6) . Rees was later a professor at the University of Exeter . In commutative algebra, he is best known for working with Douglas Northcott in 1954. The Artin-Rees Lemma is connected with his name.
In 1993 he received the Pólya Prize . He was an Honorary Fellow of Downing College, Cambridge University. In August 1998, a conference was held at Exeter University to mark his 80th birthday. He was married to the mathematician Joan Rees (lecturer at the University of Exeter). His daughter Mary Rees (* 1953) is a professor of mathematics at Liverpool University , specializing in complex dynamics. Michael Drazin (Cambridge 1953) was one of his doctoral students .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Obituary for David Rees
- ^ DG Northcott, D. Rees, Reductions of ideals in local rings, Math. Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc., Vol. 50, 1954, pp. 145-158
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Rees, David |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | British mathematician |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 29, 1918 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Abergavenny |
DATE OF DEATH | August 16, 2013 |
Place of death | Exeter |