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Marshall Harvey Stone (April 8, 1903 – January 9, 1989) was an American mathematician who contributed to real analysis, functional analysis, topology and the study of Boolean algebras . Biography. Stone was the son of Harlan Fiske Stone, who was the Chief Justice of the United States in 1941–1946.
- April 8, 1903, New York City, U.S.
Marshall Harvey Stone. Quick Info. Born. 8 April 1903. New York, USA. Died. 9 January 1989. Madras (now Chennai), India. Summary. Stone is best known for the Stone-Weierstrass theorem on uniform approximation of continuous functions by polynomials. View four larger pictures. Biography. Marshall Stone's mother was Agnes Harvey.
1926: Ordinary Linear Homogeneous Differential Equations of Order n and the Related Expansion Problems. Marshall Harvey Stone ( Nova Iorque, 8 de abril de 1903 — Chennai, 9 de janeiro de 1989) foi um matemático estadunidense .
Marshall Harvey Stone. President 1943–1944. Ph.D. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1926. Stone did research in a number of areas: self-adjoint operators in Hilbert space, spectral theory, and Boolean algebras. He proved a fundamental result now known as the Stone-Weierstrass theorem.
American mathematician who contributed to the study of linear differential equations and spectral theory. The son of a prominent lawyer, Stone attended Harvard, where he earned a doctorate in mathematics in 1926. During World War II, the government invited Stone to participate in undercover war work—a position he retained until 1946.
11 de jan. de 1989 · Marshall Harvey Stone, a prodigious and influential American mathematician, died Monday in Madras, India, apparently of a stroke. Dr. Stone, who was 85 years old, had gone to India to attend...
STONE, MARSHALL HARVEY: Appointed for research in mathematics, in particular in the field of the theory of linear representation in abstract space; tenure, twelve months from October 1, 1936. Born April 8, 1903, in New York City. Education: Harvard University, A.B., 1922, A.M., 1924, Ph.D., 1926 (Sheldon Travelling Fellow, 1924–25).