José Luis Massera Explained

José Luis Massera
Birth Name:José Luis Massera
Birth Date:June 8, 1915
Birth Place:Italy
Death Place:Uruguay
Occupation:Mathematician, engineer, writer, politician
Party:Communist Party of Uruguay
Spouse:Carmen Garayalde, Marta Valentini
Children:Ema, José Pedro
Nationality:Italian
Awards:Premio México de Ciencia y Tecnología (1997)

José Luis Massera (Genoa, Italy, June 8, 1915 – Montevideo, September 9, 2002)[1] [2] was a Uruguayan dissident and mathematician who researched the stability of differential equations.

Massera's lemma is named after him. He published over 40 papers during 1940–1970. A militant Communist, he was a political prisoner during 1975–1984. In the 1930s, Julio Rey Pastor gave regular weekend lectures on topology in Montevideo to a group that included Massera. Stimulated by contact with Argentine mathematics, the 1950s saw Uruguay develop a fine school in mathematics, of which Massera was very much a part.

Massera developed new notions of stability, and published several foundational papers and an influential textbook. His results in on periodic differential equations have been heavily cited and are referred to as Massera's theorem. His work in and on the converse to Lyapunov's criterion is also influential, and contain the well known Massera's lemma. His textbook is also heavily cited.

After military intervention in Uruguay in 1973, Massera was arrested on October 22, 1975 in Montevideo and was held in solitary confinement for nearly a year. During this time he was subjected to repeated torture resulting in injuries including a fractured pelvis. In October 1976 he was taken from solitary confinement, tried and convicted for "subversive association", and given a 24-year prison sentence. On June 22, 1979, as a consequence of a proposal put forward by Gaetano Fichera and unanimously approved by the whole Mathematics Faculty Council of the Sapienza University of Rome,[3] he was awarded the laurea honoris causa while still being under conviction.[4] He was released in 1984.

Honors

Selected works

Biographical references

Notes and References

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  4. The complete documentation on the awarding, kept in the archives of the Sapienza University of Rome, is partly transcribed and caredully analyzed by .