Leonid Khachiyan Explained

Leonid Khachiyan
Birth Name:Leonid Genrikhovich Khachiyan
Birth Date:3 May 1952
Birth Place:Leningrad, Soviet Union
Death Place:South Brunswick, New Jersey, U.S.
Citizenship:Soviet Union, United States
Workplaces:Computer Center of the Soviet Academy of Sciences
Rutgers University
Thesis1 Title:and
Thesis2 Title:)-->
Thesis1 Url:and
Thesis2 Url:)-->
Thesis1 Year:and
Thesis2 Year:)-->
Doctoral Advisors:)-->
Children:2, including Anna
Awards:Fulkerson Prize (1982)

Leonid Genrikhovich Khachiyan (; Russian: Леони́д Ге́нрихович Хачия́н; May 3, 1952April 29, 2005) was a Soviet and American mathematician and computer scientist.

He was most famous for his ellipsoid algorithm (1979) for linear programming,[1] which was the first such algorithm known to have a polynomial running time. Even though this algorithm was shown to be impractical, it has inspired other randomized algorithms for convex programming and is considered a significant theoretical breakthrough.

Early life and education

Khachiyan was born on May 3, 1952, in Leningrad to Armenian parents Genrikh Borisovich Khachiyan, a mathematician and professor of theoretical mechanics, and Zhanna Saakovna Khachiyan, a civil engineer. His grandparents were Karabakh Armenians.[2] He had two brothers: Boris and Yevgeniy (Eugene). His family moved to Moscow in 1961, when he was nine. He received a master's degree from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology. In 1978 he earned his Ph.D. in computational mathematics/theoretical mathematics from the Computer Center of the Soviet Academy of Sciences and in 1984 a D.Sc. in computer science from the same institution.

Career

Khachiyan began his career at the Soviet Academy of Sciences, working as a researcher at the academy's Computer Center in Moscow. He also worked as an adjunct professor at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology. In 1979 he stated: "I am a theoretical mathematician and I'm just working on a class of very difficult mathematical problems." Khachiyan immigrated to the United States in 1989. He first taught at Cornell University as a visiting professor. In 1990 he joined Rutgers University as a visiting professor. He became professor of computer science at Rutgers in 1992. By 2005, he held the position of Professor II at Rutgers, reserved for those faculty who have achieved scholarly eminence in their discipline.

Work on linear programming

Ellipsoid method

Khachiyan is best known for his four-page February 1979 paper[3] that indicated how an ellipsoid method for linear programming can be implemented in polynomial time. The paper was translated into several languages and spread around the world unusually quickly. Authors of a 1981 survey of his work noted that it "has caused great excitement and stimulated a flood of technical papers" and was covered by major newspapers. It was originally published without proofs, which were provided by Khachiyan in a later paper published in 1980[4] and by Peter Gács and Laszlo Lovász in 1981.[5] It was Gács and Lovász who first brought attention to Khachiyan's paper at the International Symposium on Mathematical Programming in Montreal in August 1979. It was further popularized when Gina Kolata reported it in Science Magazine on November 2, 1979.[6]

Khachiyan's theory is considered a groundbreaking one that "helped advance the field of linear programming." Giorgio Ausiello noted that the method was not practical, "but it was a real breakthrough for the world of operations research and computer science, since it proved that the design of polynomial time algorithms for linear programming was possible and in fact opened the way to other, more practical, algorithms that were designed in the following years."[7]

Personal life and death

Khachiyan spoke Russian and English, but not Armenian. Bahman Kalantari noted that "For some, his English accent wasn’t always easy to understand." A 1979 New York Times profile of him described Khachiyan as "a relaxed, friendly young man in a sweater who speaks a little English, which he learned in high school."

He was known as "Leo" and "Lenya" to his friends and colleagues. Václav Chvátal described him as "selfless, open, patient, sympathetic, understanding, considerate." Michael Todd, another colleague, described him as "cynical about politics," "very modest and kind to his friends," and "intolerant of condescension and pomposity."

Khachiyan married Olga Pischikova Reynberg, of Russian-Jewish origin,[8] in 1985. They had two daughters, Anna and Nina, who were teenagers at the time of his death. He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 2000. He died of a heart attack in South Brunswick, New Jersey on April 29, 2005, at the age of 52.

Recognition

In 1982 he was awarded the prestigious Fulkerson Prize by the Mathematical Programming Society and the American Mathematical Society for outstanding papers in the area of discrete mathematics, particularly his 1979 article "A polynomial algorithm in linear programming."[9]

Khachiyan was considered a "noted expert in computer science whose work helped computers process extremely complex problems." He was called one of the world's most famous computer scientists at the time of his death by Haym Hirsh, chair of the computer science department at Rutgers. "Computer scientists and mathematicians say his work helped revolutionize his field," noted his New York Times obituary. Bahman Kalantari, a friend and colleague at Rutgers, wrote: "Surely, Khachiyan shall always remain to be among the greatest and most legendary figures in the field of mathematical programming."

References

Notes
Citations

External links

Notes and References

  1. Eugene L. . Lawler . The Great Mathematical Sputnik of 1979 . The Sciences . 1980 . 20 . 7 . 12–15 . 10.1002/j.2326-1951.1980.tb01345.x . 56588045 .
  2. Web site: Khachiyan . Anna . Family portrait of Armenian ancestors, Nagorno-Karabakh, 1920s (great great grandparents in the center, grandmother little girl on the left with the pigtails) . . https://archive.today/20200817100827/https://twitter.com/annakhachiyan/status/1253812102160146432 . 17 August 2020 . April 25, 2020 . 17 August 2020 . live .
  3. Khachiyan, L. G. 1979. "A Polynomial Algorithm in Linear Programming". Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 244, 1093-1096 (translated in Soviet Mathematics Doklady 20, 191-194, 1979).
  4. Khachiyan, L. G. 1980. "Polynomial Algorithms in Linear Programming". Zhurnal Vychisditel'noi Matematiki i Matematicheskoi Fiziki (USSR Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics) 20, 51-68.
  5. Book: Gács . Peter . Lovász . Laszlo . König . H. . Korte . B. . Ritter . K. . Mathematical Programming at Oberwolfach . 1981 . 10.1007/BFb0120921 . 978-3-642-00805-4 . 61–68 . Khachiyan’s algorithm for linear programming. 14 . Mathematical Programming Studies .
  6. Kolata . Gina Bari . Gina Kolata . Mathematicians Amazed by Russian's Discovery . . November 2, 1979 . 206 . 4418 . 545–546 . 10.1126/science.206.4418.545 . 17759415 . 1979Sci...206..545B . 1749236.
  7. Book: Ausiello . Giorgio . Giorgio Ausiello . The Making of a New Science: A Personal Journey Through the Early Years of Theoretical Computer Science . 2018 . . 9783319626802 . 174.
  8. Web site: Khachiyan . Anna . I had such a shambolic, dysfunctional upbringing my parents didn't even bother to teach me chess — unheard of and frankly shameful for Russian family of Armenian and Ashkenazi origins lol! . . https://archive.today/20200817100617/https://twitter.com/annakhachiyan/status/1202044514359238657 . 17 August 2020 . December 4, 2019 . 17 August 2020 . live .
  9. Web site: The Fulkerson Prize . mathopt.org . . https://web.archive.org/web/20190212173654/http://www.mathopt.org/?nav=fulkerson . 12 February 2019.