Guido Leopold Weiss (29 December 1928–25 December 2021 in St. Louis[1]) was an American mathematician, working in analysis, especially Fourier analysis and harmonic analysis.

Guido Weiss
Guido Weiss c. 2011
Born(1928-12-29)29 December 1928
Died25 December 2021(2021-12-25) (aged 92)
Alma materUniversity of Chicago (BS, MS, PhD)
SpouseBarbara Weiss
Children2[1]
Awards
Scientific career
Institutions
Thesis On certain classes of function spaces and on the interpolation of sublinear operators  (1956)
Doctoral advisorAntoni Zygmund

Childhood

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Weiss was born in Trieste Italy into a Jewish family. His parents, Edoardo and Vonda Weiss, were both psychiatrists. Weiss was forced out of school at the age of 9, upon the passage of Italy's Italian Racial Laws, which forbade all Jewish children from attending public school. He attended a Jewish school in Rome until the end of 1939 when his father was sponsored by members of the Menninger family to emigrate to America. The family settled in Topeka, Kansas.

Career

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Weiss studied at the University of Chicago, where he received in 1951 his master's degree and in 1956 under Antoni Zygmund his PhD with thesis On certain classes of function spaces and on the interpolation of sublinear operators.[2] At DePaul University he became an instructor in 1955, an assistant professor in 1956, and in 1959 an associate professor. in 1960 he was a visiting professor in Buenos Aires and in the same year a postdoc at the Institut Henri Poincaré in Paris. In 1961 Weiss became an associate professor and in 1963 a professor at Washington University in St. Louis, where from 1967 to 1970 he was also chair of the mathematics department. He was a visiting professor at several universities, including the University of Geneva (1964–65), the Université Paris-Sud (1970–71), the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa (1980), in Madrid and in Beijing. In the academic year 1987–88 he was at MSRI as the organizer of a program in classical analysis.

In 1967 Weiss won the Chauvenet Prize for his article Harmonic Analysis. In 1994 he was given honorary doctorates in Milan and Barcelona.[3] In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[4]

Works

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References

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