Lars Gårding Explained

Lars Gårding
Birth Date:7 March 1919
Birth Place:Hedemora, Sweden
Nationality:Swedish
Fields:Mathematics
Workplaces:Lund University
Alma Mater:Lund University
Doctoral Advisor:Marcel Riesz
Doctoral Students:Lars Hörmander
Thesis Title:On a Class of Linear Transformations Connected with Group Representations
Thesis Year:1944
Known For:Work on partial differential equations
Gårding–Wightman axioms[1]
Gårding domain
Gårding's inequality
Petrovsky lacuna
Awards:Member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (1953)

Lars Gårding (7 March 1919 – 7 July 2014)[2] was a Swedish mathematician. He made notable contributions to the study of partial differential equations and partial differential operators. He was a professor of mathematics at Lund University in Sweden 1952–1984. Together with Marcel Riesz, he was a thesis advisor for Lars Hörmander.

Biography

Gårding was born in Hedemora, Sweden but grew up in Motala, where his father was an engineer at the plant. He began to study mathematics in Lund in 1937 with the first intention of becoming an actuary.

His doctorate thesis, which was written under supervision of Marcel Riesz, was first on group representations in 1944, but in the following years he changed his research focus to the theory of partial differential equations. He held the professorship of mathematics at Lund University from 1952 until retirement in 1984.

His interest was not limited to mathematics, but also in art, literature and music. He played the violin and the piano. Further, he published a book on bird songs and calls in 1987, a result of his interest in bird watching.

Gårding was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1953 and of the Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters in 1985.[3]

Gårding died on 7 July 2014, aged 95.

Selected works

Books
Articles

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hilbert's sixth problem.. Encyclopedia of Mathematics . 14 July 2014.)
  2. Web site: Lars Gårding - Sydsvenskan . Sydsvenskan.se . 2014-07-28.
  3. Book: SPHINX Yearbook 2013-2014 . Societas Scientiarum Fennica . 2014 . 159.