Sergei Borisovich Stechkin

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sergei Borissowitsch Stetschkin , Russian Сергей Борисович Стечкин , English transcription Sergey Stechkin, (born September 6, 1920 in Moscow ; † November 22, 1995 ibid) was a Russian mathematician who dealt with analysis .

Stetschkin was the son of Boris Sergejewitsch Stetschkin and related to the aircraft pioneer Nikolai Jegorowitsch Schukowski . He began his studies at the State University in Gorki ( he had not been admitted to Lomonosov University , probably because his father was considered a dissident at the time), but one year later he moved to the Mechanical and Mathematical Faculty of Lomonosov University, where he received his doctorate in 1948 under Dmitri Evgenjewitsch Menschow ( On the order of the best approximation of continuous functions , Russian). In 1958 he completed his habilitation ( Russian doctorate ). Stechkin was at the Steklov Institutein Moscow, whose branch in Sverdlovsk he founded and headed (later Institute for Mathematics and Mechanics of the Ural branch of the Soviet Academy of Sciences ) and he taught at Lomonosov University.

He is particularly concerned with harmonic analysis including applications in analytical number theory, polynomials, and approximation theory. Stetschkin was editor of the magazine Matematitscheskie Sametki for more than twenty years . In 1993 he received the Chebyshev Gold Medal from the Russian Academy of Sciences .

Sergei Wladimirowitsch Konjagin is one of his doctoral students .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Sergei Borissowitsch Stetschkin in the Mathematics Genealogy Project (English)Template: MathGenealogyProject / Maintenance / id used