John Williams Calkin[1] (11 October 1909, New Rochelle, New York – 5 August 1964, Westhampton, New York) was an American mathematician, specializing in functional analysis. The Calkin algebra is named after him.[2]

Photo from Calkin's identification badge at Los Alamos.

Biography edit

Calkin received his bachelor's degree from Columbia University in 1933 and his master's degree in 1934 and Ph.D. in 1937 from Harvard University. His doctoral dissertation Applications of the Theory of Hilbert Space to Partial Differential Equations; the Self-Adjoint Transformations in Hilbert Space Associated with a Formal Partial Differential Operator of the Second Order and Elliptic Type ) was supervised by Marshall H. Stone. In the dissertation, Calkin acknowledges useful discussions with John von Neumann.[3] At the Institute for Advanced Study, Calkin was a research assistant for the academic year 1937–1938 (working with Oswald Veblen and von Neumann) and in the first eight months of 1942.[4][3] From 1938 to 1942 he was an assistant professor at the University of New Hampshire and then at Chicago's Illinois Institute of Technology. During the late 1930s and early 1940s he wrote several important papers on operator theory and its applications to partial differential equations.[5]

During World War II Calkin was part of a mine warfare operations analysis group with J.L. Doob, J. von Neumann, and M.H. Stone. Von Neumann and Calkin worked on shock waves and damage by explosives; they were sent to England to learn of the progress under way there. When it appeared that their special knowledge would be useful for the Manhattan Project, they moved to Los Alamos.[3]

From Los Alamos, Calkin went in 1946 as a Guggenheim Fellow[6] to the California Institute of Technology. He later taught at the Rice Institute (renamed Rice University in 1960), before he returned in 1949 to Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory as a member of the theoretical division.[5] There he worked on the development of the H-bomb.

In 1958, he accepted a consulting appointment at New York University and at Brookhaven National Laboratory and, in 1961, was named head, and then chairman of the Applied Mathematics Department.[5]

Upon his death he was survived by his widow, Emilienne Calkin (1922–2000), and his son, Brant Calkin (born 1934), from a previous marriage (to Eileen Calkin).[7] Brant Calkin is an environmental activist in New Mexico and Utah and former president of the Sierra Club.[8]

Selected publications edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mac Lane, Saunders (February 1997). "Requiem for the Skillful" (PDF). Notices of the AMS. 44 (2): 207–208. Mac Lane mentions Jack Calkin as one of the few mathematicians working in the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos, with John von Neumann, Stanislaw Ulam, C. J. Everett, and Paul Olum.
  2. ^ Calkin, John W. (1941). "Two-sided ideals and congruences in the ring of bounded operators in Hilbert space". Annals of Mathematics. 42 (4): 839–873. doi:10.2307/1968771. JSTOR 1968771.
  3. ^ a b c Hassi, Seppo; de Snoo, Hendrik S. V.; Szafraniec, Franciszek Hugon (2012). "John Williams Calkin: a short biography". Operator Methods for Boundary Value Problems. pp. 1–2. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139135061.002. ISBN 9781139135061.
  4. ^ "John W. Calkin". Institute for Advanced Study.
  5. ^ a b c "John W. Calkin". Physics Today. 17 (11): 102–105. 1964. doi:10.1063/1.3051213.
  6. ^ "John W. Calkin". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
  7. ^ "John W. Calkin, A Mathematician; Brookhaven Official Dead—Was at Los Alamos". NY Times. 6 August 1964.
  8. ^ Groene, Scott. "Brant Calkin". canyoncountryzephyr.com.