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| Fotografii | Monede | Timbre | Schite | Cautare |
After a year as an Instructor at Chicago University, Auslander was appointed as an Instructor at the University of Michigan. He held this post for two academic years, 1954-56, before being awarded an NSF Fellowship which enabled him to spend the year 1956-57 at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. The year 1956 marks an important stage in his career for in that year he published his first joint paper with D Buchsbaum Homological dimension in Noetherian rings. It was to be the first of many joint papers that the two mathematicians produced in a long and fruitful collaboration. In 1957 Auslander was appointed as an Assistant Professor at Brandeis University. Three years later he was promoted to Associate Professor and he became Chairman of the Mathematics Department at Brandeis. After holding this post for a year, Auslander was awarded an NSF Senior Postdoctoral Fellowship which enabled him to spend the academic year 1961-62 at the University of Paris. He published Modules over unramified local rings in 1961 which continued, and to a certain extent completed, the work which he had begun with Buchsbaum over five years before. Auslander was invited to give a special lecture at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Stockholm in 1962. He chose to speak on his results on modules over unramified local rings. It was the first of two addresses he gave to the International Congress of Mathematicians, the second being in 1986 at Berkeley. Returning to Brandeis in 1962, Auslander was promoted to full Professor in 1963, a position that he held until his death in 1994. Travel was one of Auslander's loves and he spent time in many different parts of the world holding visiting positions at many universities. After being awarded a Sloan Foundation Fellowship for 1963-64, he spent the summer of 1965 as a Fulbright Fellow at the University of Uruguay in Montevideo. The academic year 1965-66 was spent on a second year long visit to the University of Paris, and in 1970-71 he held two visiting positions, first at the University of Illinois at Urbana and then at Queen Mary College in London, England. In 1975 he visited Mexico setting up a research group there on the representation theory of Artin algebras. For a couple of years he travelled less and in this period he was Chairman of the Mathematics Department at Brandeis for a second time during 1976-78. In 1978-79 Auslander made the first of several visits to the University of Trondheim in Norway, on this occasion as a Guggenheim Fellow. He made further visits to Trondheim in 1989-90 and 1991 being appointed as an Adjunct Professor there in 1992. It is interesting to note that half of Auslander's publications have a co-author from Trondheim. A visit to China in 1986 saw him help establish a successful research group on representation theory. Other universities he visited included Texas at Austin (1981-82), Bielefeld (1984, 1985), Virginia State (1986-87), and Paderborn (1988, 1990). The countries he visited are too numerous to mention but we should note in particular visits to Israel and Switzerland. It is fitting that Auslander ended his days while travelling. Knowing that he had incurable cancer he set off for a last trip during which he visited again some of his favourite parts of the word :
The authors of write about his contributions to the representation theory of algebras:
While on the theme of representation theory of algebras, Dieter Happel reviewing writes:
To gain some insight into the range of Auslander's contributions we list the chapter headings that his papers are divided into in his Selected Works ( and ):
H Rossi writes about Auslander's personality in :
In [ ) Peskine and Reiten also write of Auslander's personality:
Among the honours he received for his outstanding contributions we should mention his election to the American Academy of Arts and Science and to the Royal Norwegian Society of Science and Letters.
Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |