Günther Schulz (mathematician)

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Karl Edmund Günther Schulz (born November 30, 1903 in Berlin-Charlottenburg , † November 19, 1962 in Stuttgart ) was a German mathematician.

Schulz studied mathematics from 1922 at the University of Berlin , where he received his doctorate under Felix Jentzsch in 1928 (on the examination of optical systems with grids) and passed the state examination in 1929. He then worked as an assistant at the University of Berlin, where he completed his habilitation there in 1937 and completed his habilitation in 1938 at the TH Berlin. In the 1930s he published in the journal Deutsche Mathematik , his habilitation thesis Limit theorems for the probabilities of concatenated events . In 1943 he became an adjunct professor at the TH Berlin, entrusted with the representation of a full professorship, which he remained until 1945. From 1946 he was a research assistant at the Mathematical Research Institute in Oberwolfach . In 1946 he became a full professor at the TH Aachen and in 1951 at the TH Stuttgart .

He dealt with singular integral equations, numerical mathematics (extrapolation method for ordinary differential equations) and the fundamentals of hydrodynamics.

Fonts

  • Collection of formulas for practical mathematics, Göschen Collection, De Gruyter 1937

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Günther Schulz in the Mathematics Genealogy Project (English)Template: MathGenealogyProject / Maintenance / id used
  2. Deutsche Mathematik, Volume 1, 1937, pp. 655–699
  3. Life and career data according to Michael Toepell (ed.), General Directory of Members of the German Mathematicians Association 1890–1990, Munich 1991
  4. ↑ Fields of work according to Catalogus Professorum TU Berlin