Harold Shapiro | |
Birth Date: | 2 April 1928 |
Birth Place: | New York, United States |
Death Place: | Stockholm, Sweden |
Field: | Mathematics |
Work Institution: | Royal Institute of Technology |
Alma Mater: | City College of New York MIT |
Doctoral Advisor: | Norman Levinson |
Known For: | Shapiro polynomials |
Harold Seymour Shapiro (2 April 1928[1] – 5 March 2021) was a professor of mathematics at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden, best known for inventing the so-called Shapiro polynomials (also known as Golay–Shapiro polynomials or Rudin–Shapiro polynomials) and for work on quadrature domains.
His main research areas were approximation theory, complex analysis, functional analysis, and partial differential equations.He was also interested in the pedagogy of problem-solving.
Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, to a Jewish family, Shapiro earned a B.Sc. from the City College of New York in 1949 and earned his M.S. degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1951. He received his Ph.D. in 1952 from MIT; his thesis was written under the supervision of Norman Levinson. He was the father of cosmologist Max Tegmark, a graduate of the Royal Institute of Technology and now a professor at MIT. Shapiro died on 5 March 2021, aged 92.[2]