Heinz-Otto Kreiss
Heinz-Otto Kreiss (14 September 1930 – 16 December 2015) was a German mathematician in the fields of numerical analysis, applied mathematics, and what was the new area of computing in the early 1960s. Born in Hamburg, Germany, he earned his Ph.D. at Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan in 1959. Over the course of his long career, Kreiss wrote a number of books in addition to the purely academic journal articles he authored across several disciplines. He was professor at Uppsala University, California Institute of Technology and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He was also a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. At the time of his death, Kreiss was a Swedish citizen, living in Stockholm. He died in Stockholm in 2015, aged 85.[1]
Kreiss did research on the initial value problem for partial differential equations, numerical treatment of partial differential equations, difference equations, and applications to hydrodynamics and meteorology.
In 1974, he delivered a plenary lecture Initial Boundary Value Problems for Hyperbolic Partial Differential Equations at the International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM) in Vancouver. In 2002 he won the National Academy of Sciences Award in Numerical Analysis and Applied Mathematics.[2] In 2003 he was the John von Neumann Lecturer of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM). He was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
His doctoral students include Björn Engquist and Bertil Gustafsson. His daughter, Gunilla Kreiss, was a student of Engquist.[3]
Selected publications
- with Jens Lorenz: Initial-boundary value problems and the Navier-Stokes equations, Academic Press 1989, SIAM 2004[4]
- with Hedwig Ulmer Busenhart: Time-dependent partial differential equations and their numerical solution, Birkhäuser 2001
- with Bertil Gustafsson, Joseph Oliger: time-dependent problems and difference methods, Wiley 1995
References
- ^ "In Memoriam: Heinz-Otto Kreiss". UCLA Department of Mathematics. 18 December 2015. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
- ^ NAS Award in Applied Mathematics and Numerical Analysis
- ^ Heinz-Otto Kreiss at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ Constantin, Peter (1990). "Review of Initial-boundary value problems and the Navier-Stokes equations by Heinz-Otto Kreiss and Jens Lorenz". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.). 23: 555–559. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1990-15979-8.
External links
- Heinz-Otto Kreiss at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- Literature by and about Heinz-Otto Kreiss, Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek
- v
- t
- e
- Lars Ahlfors (1960)
- Mark Kac (1961)
- Jean Leray (1962)
- Stanislaw Ulam (1963)
- Solomon Lefschetz (1964)
- Freeman Dyson (1965)
- Eugene Wigner (1966)
- Chia-Chiao Lin (1967)
- Peter Lax (1968)
- George F. Carrier (1969)
- James H. Wilkinson (1970)
- Paul Samuelson (1971)
- Jule Charney (1974)
- James Lighthill (1975)
- René Thom (1976)
- Kenneth Arrow (1977)
- Peter Henrici (1978)
- Kurt O. Friedrichs (1979)
- Keith Stewartson (1980)
- Garrett Birkhoff (1981)
- David Slepian (1982)
- Joseph B. Keller (1983)
- Jürgen Moser (1984)
- John W. Tukey (1985)
- Jacques-Louis Lions (1986)
- Richard M. Karp (1987)
- Germund Dahlquist (1988)
- Stephen Smale (1989)
- Andrew Majda (1990)
- R. Tyrrell Rockafellar (1992)
- Martin D. Kruskal (1994)
- Carl de Boor (1996)
- William Kahan (1997)
- Olga Ladyzhenskaya (1998)
- Charles S. Peskin (1999)
- Persi Diaconis (2000)
- David Donoho (2001)
- Eric Lander (2002)
- Heinz-Otto Kreiss (2003)
- Alan C. Newell (2004)
- Jerrold E. Marsden (2005)
- George C. Papanicolaou (2006)
- Nancy Kopell (2007)
- David Gottlieb (2008)
- Franco Brezzi (2009)
- Bernd Sturmfels (2010)
- Ingrid Daubechies (2011)
- John M. Ball (2012)
- Stanley Osher (2013)
- Leslie Greengard (2014)
- Jennifer Tour Chayes (2015)
- Donald Knuth (2016)
- Bernard J. Matkowsky (2017)
- Charles F. Van Loan (2018)
- Margaret H. Wright (2019)
- Nick Trefethen (2020)
- Chi-Wang Shu (2021)
- Leah Keshet (2022)
- Yousef Saad (2023)
This article about a German mathematician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e