Steven Alexander Gaál

Is your surname Gaál?

Connect to 2,147 Gaál profiles on Geni

Steven Alexander Gaál's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Related Projects

Steven Alexander Gaál

Hungarian: Gál István Sándor
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Budapest, Hungary
Death: March 17, 2016 (92)
Immediate Family:

Ex-husband of Private
Father of Private and Private

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
view all

Immediate Family

    • Private
      ex-spouse
    • Private
      child
    • Private
      child

About Steven Alexander Gaál

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Gaal

Gaal received his Ph.D. under Frigyes Riesz and Lipót Fejér in 1947, although at the time, graduate study in Birth reference: "Minnesota Naturalization Card Index, 1930-1988," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:24Y4-74P : 8 November 2017), Steven Alexander Gaal, 1963;


From Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Gaal
Steven Alexander Gaal (February 22, 1924 – March 17, 2016) (also known as István Sándor Gál or I. S. Gál) was a Hungarian-American mathematician and Professor of Mathematics at the University of Minnesota—Minneapolis.

Education
Gaal received his Ph.D. under Frigyes Riesz and Lipót Fejér in 1947, although at the time, graduate study in Hungary did not exist in the formal way it is thought of today. There were no formalities of preliminary exams or qualifying exams, no thesis advisor or tuition. After World War I, Hungary was dismembered and the Austro-Hungarian monarchy ended. Two thirds of Hungary's territory was given to other states, some existing, others created and since vanished. Under these conditions, only few higher education faculty could be appointed and students had to learn only from books or one or two old sick professors. Nevertheless, doctoral students managed to create publishable theses. Gaal's thesis problem had its origin in a letter Paul Erdős wrote to Pál Turán, in which he mentions a prize problem posed by the Netherlands Mathematical Society. Gaal solved it and with Erdős jointly published the solution.

Career
Gaal later went to Paris, where he was employed by the CNRS (Centre National del la Recherche Scientifique) at the rank of attaché de recherché. His supervisor was Jean Favard with higher supervisor Jacques Hadamard. Gaal met many leading French mathematicians at the CNRS, including Jean Leray and both Élie and Henri Cartan. After emigrating to the United States, he held positions at Yale and Princeton before joining the faculty of the School of Mathematics at the University of Minnesota. Atle Selberg was instrumental in bringing Gaal to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. While in Princeton, Gaal met Albert Einstein, though the two did not work together. It also was in Paris that Gaal had first met Paul Erdős. Seven years later, they wrote two more joint papers. Over the years, Gaal met Erdős on a number of other occasions, including his last visit to Minneapolis on the invitation of Carleton College, who sponsored his visit. Robert Langlands has cited Gaal's influence in his early investigations of zeta functions and Eisenstein series. Gaal's former wife, Lisl Gaal (originally Lisl Novak), is an accomplished mathematician in her own right and is well known for her text Classical Galois Theory. In 2004, Gaal was honored at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences 80th anniversary as one of the "big five" most distinguished Hungarian mathematicians. The other honorees included Janos Horvath, János Aczél, Ákos Csaszar and László Fuchs. Gaal gave a talk entitled "Mikor periodikus egy Fibonacci-sorozat? – When is a Fibonacci sequence periodic?"


https://math.umn.edu/directory/steven-gaal
Steven Alexander Gaal was born as István Sándor Gál on February 22, 1924, in Budapest, Hungary. He received his Ph.D. in 1947 from the University of Budapest under Frigyes Riesz and Lipót Fejér. His thesis problem had its origin in a letter Paul Erdős wrote to Pál Turán, in which he mentions a prize problem posed by the Netherlands Mathematical Society. Gaal solved it and with Erdős jointly published the solution, giving him an Erdős number of 1, which he re-earned in a subsequent two-part collaboration in 1955.

After obtaining his Ph.D., Gaal served as an instructor at the University of Szeged and as an assistant professor in Budapest. He then went to the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in Paris, where he was from 1948 to 1950 with the rank of Attaché de Recherches; his supervisors were Jean Favard and Jacques Hadamard. It also was in Paris that Gaal first met Paul Erdős. Then Atle Selberg, of trace formula fame, was instrumental in bringing Gaal to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, where he served as Selberg’s assistant from 1950 to 1952. In 1953, he became Instructor and then in 1954 Assistant Professor at Cornell University, and was a Research Associate at Yale University from 1958-60. He and his wife Lisl both joined the faculty of the School of Mathematics at the University of Minnesota in 1960. Steven came as an Associate Professor and was soon promoted to Full Professor in 1963. During his time at Minnesota, he supervised 5 Ph.D. students.

Gaal's research interests included both number theory and analysis. Robert Langlands, another very prominent number theorist, has said in a published interview that "...during this year [in Yale] a major event for me ... was a course of Stephen Gaal on analytic number theory, more precisely, on Hecke theory. His intent was to prepare himself, and incidentally us, for the study of the work of Atle Selberg ... I listened to Gaal's lectures with enthusiasm ..." Gaal’s foundational 1949 paper on Diophantine approximations has recently had an enormous impact on the study of greatest common divisor (GCD) sums, including surprising connections to the Riemann zeta function. While at the University of Minnesota, he also wrote 2 well-regarded books: Point Set Topology and Linear Analysis and Representation Theory; both were later reprinted by Dover. He also wrote a manuscript entitled Lectures on Algebraic and Analytic Number Theory, which was printed by Jones Letter Service.

In 2004, Gaal was honored at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences 80th anniversary as one of the "big five" group of distinguished Hungarian mathematicians. The other honorees were Janos Horvath, János Aczél, Ákos Csaszar and László Fuchs. Gaal went to Hungary to participate in the festivities where he gave a talk entitled When Is a Fibonacci Sequence Periodic? Gaal retired in 1993 and subsequently moved to Nevada, where he spent the last years of his life. He passed away on March 17, 2016, and is survived by his former wife Lisl (also an emeritus faculty in the School of Mathematics), daughters Barbara and Dorothy, their husbands, and three grandchildren.

view all

Steven Alexander Gaál's Timeline

1924
February 22, 1924
Budapest, Hungary
2016
March 17, 2016
Age 92