Nigel Kalton Explained

Nigel Kalton
Birth Date:June 20, 1946
Birth Place:Bromley, Kent, England
Death Place:Columbia, Missouri, US
Fields:Mathematics
Workplaces:University College of Swansea, University of Missouri
Alma Mater:Cambridge University
Doctoral Advisor:D.J.H. Garling

Nigel John Kalton (June 20, 1946  - August 31, 2010) was a British-American mathematician, known for his contributions to functional analysis.[1]

Career

Kalton was born in Bromley and educated at Dulwich College, where he excelled at both mathematics and chess. After studying mathematics at Trinity College, Cambridge, he received his PhD, which was awarded the Rayleigh Prize for research excellence, from Cambridge University in 1970. He then held positions at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania, Warwick, Swansea, University of Illinois, and Michigan State University, before becoming full professor at the University of Missouri, Columbia, in 1979.[1] [2]

He received the Stefan Banach Medal from the Polish Academy of Sciences in 2005.[3] A conference in honour of his 60th birthday was held in Miami University of Ohio in 2006.[2] He died in Columbia, Missouri, aged 64.

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. 2774056. Nigel J. Kalton (1946 - 2010). Obituary. J. Funct. Anal.. 260. 2011. 10. 2843. 10.1016/j.jfa.2011.02.008. free.
  2. Nigel Kalton, 1946 - 2010. https://archive.today/20130120035853/http://www.columbiatribune.com/news/2010/sep/05/nigel-kalton-1946-2010/. dead. 2013-01-20. Sunday, September 5, 2010. Columbia Daily Tribune.
  3. Web site: Stefan Banach Medal . Polish Academy of Sciences. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20201105125729/https://www.impan.pl/en/events/awards/stefan-banach-medal. 2020-11-05.