ISRAEL GELFAND, 96
Russian Mathematician And Inspiring Teacher
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Monday, October 12, 2009
Israel Gelfand, 96, a Russian mathematician whose research laid the mathematical framework for the imaging abilities of MRI and CT scanners and who did crucial work in a host of more esoteric fields, died Oct. 5 at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, N.J.
During a century when mathematicians were becoming ever more specialized, focusing on narrow and often exotic areas of research, Dr. Gelfand became a legend as a generalist who made contributions in more than a dozen areas. His work in representation theory was an underpinning of quantum physics.
He was an inspiring teacher, creating math seminars in Moscow and at Rutgers University that provided encouragement and education for aspiring math students and establishing correspondence courses that allowed young students access to the best mathematical ideas of their times.
He said that mathematicians were like music composers and that he was probably most like Mozart, said Edward Frenkel of the University of California at Berkeley, who worked with him in Moscow. " 'We like Mozart not because of a particular piece that he created,' he said. 'It's the totality of his work and its profound beauty that make him a great composer.' Gelfand thought the same applied to his work," Frenkel said.
"He was considered the greatest mathematician of the last half of the 20th century," said Vladimir Retakh, his colleague at Rutgers, where Gelfand spent the last part of his career. "He probably was the last one who worked in almost every area of mathematics, trying to combine things" rather than attempting to solve well-known puzzles.
Dr. Gelfand's work won many accolades: the prestigious Wolf Prize, mathematics' equivalent of the Nobel; a grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation; the Steele Prize; and the Order of Lenin, three times.
Israel Moiseevich Gelfand was born Sept. 2, 1913, in the tiny town now known as Krasnye Okny in Ukraine. In the ninth grade, he was expelled from technical school, because his father operated a mill and had an assistant, and was thus considered a capitalist. At 15, he contracted appendicitis, which then required a 12-day stay in the hospital. On the way there, he asked his parents to buy him a calculus text, and he mastered it in his bed.
He did not complete high school or receive an undergraduate degree. When he went to Moscow in 1930 seeking work, he began attending mathematics seminars at Moscow State University. Two years later, he was admitted directly into graduate school, receiving a doctorate in 1940.
In 1943, he established his legendary mathematics seminar, held every Monday night for nearly 50 years on the 14th floor of the Moscow university building.
"He would welcome all undergraduates, talented graduate students and brilliant professors," Frenkel said.
The meetings, which often lasted well into the night, were more like a social event than a traditional seminar, Frenkel said.
"He would walk the aisles, stop and chat with people, interrupt and ask questions, pull a member of the audience to the blackboard and ask them to repeat what had just been said or to find a mistake in it. His interest was always in the development of the next generation of mathematicians."





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