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| Fotografii | Monede | Timbre | Schite | Cautare |
Littlewood's first appointment was as a school teacher, but, in 1928, he found a post as a temporary part-time lecturer at University College Swansea. He worked for a short time at Queen's College, Dundee (at that time part of the University of St Andrews) but returned to Swansea where he worked until 1947. He married Muriel Doris Dyson in 1930 and they had one child, a son born in 1935. His part-time position became an assistant lectureship in 1930 and a lectureship in 1934. Although his research flourished in Swansea, Littlewood was keen to return to Cambridge and, when the chance came in 1947, he accepted a post as university lecturer. It was not a College appointment so he only had an office through the kindness of Hodge . Littlewood's family were not happy with the move to Cambridge but he did not remain there long for in 1948 he was appointed to the chair of mathematics at the University College of North Wales, Bangor. Until Littlewood's appointment to Swansea he had no definite research interests. However at Swansea the professor, Archibald Read Richardson, was an algebraist who, according to , was 'bursting with problems', and he introduced Littlewood to research in algebra. His first work was on quaternion algebras and some of his first papers were written jointly with A R Richardson. During this period, developments of his first papers led to further work in which he laid the foundations of invariant theory of forms in non-commutative algebra. Invariant theory was at its height in the 19th century with the work of Cayley , Sylvester , Clebsch , Gordan and others. Littlewood claimed that:
Another reason was certainly the work of Hilbert , but Littlewood tried to remedy the "tensor reason" in a series of papers on tensors and invariant theory. Littlewood's main work, however, began in 1934 after Richardson had suggested that Littlewood study papers by Frobenius and Schur . The two Swansea mathematicians then collaborated on Group characters and algebras which was published in the Philosophical transactions of The Royal Society in 1934 :
This marks the beginning of Littlewood's investigation of group characters , in particular the characters of the symmetric group . He examined S-functions and applied these to invariant theory. He also studied quantum mechanics and some of the problems in representation theory he considered were motivated by this. He published three books perhaps the first The theory of group characters and matrix representations of groups (1940) being the most famous. J A Green, a student of Littlewood's, summed up his approach to mathematics writing:
In the authors write:
Morris writes in :
In 1970 Littlewood retired from the chair at Bangor, but he continued to live at Llandudno on the North Wales coast. Around the time of his 76th birthday, Littlewood fell and broke a leg. He died suddenly a few weeks later at his home. He was buried at Llanrhos, just south of Llandudno, where parts of the ancient church date back to the 6th century. His wife Muriel died ten years later.
Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |