What Happened to The Participants of the Ramanujan Centenary Conference (June 1-5, 1987)?
UNDER CONSTRUCTIONS, NOT YET PUBLIC
A class project by Dr. Z.'s Math History Class (Fall 2021)
Coordinating Editor: Sarah MAGNO
In 1987, the 100th birthday of the Indian genius Srinivasa Ramanujan was
celebrated in a historic conference held at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Here is the
conference picture
In this class project, every student (except the editor, Sarah Magno), is in charge of researching five of the
participants in that historic confrence (the assignment are coordinated by Sarah Magno).
Every student, for each of the five particiapants he or she is in charge of, should write a mini-biographical essay,
using the internet, and if the persons are still alive, it would be great if they can conduct a short (or not so short, it is up to you and the person interviewed)
about their mathematical interests, and how it is related to Ramanujan. This can be done via email, or even, if the persons are willing (after you got their
consent via email), to conduct an interview via phone or skype.
In addition, for each participant, you should list the year of birth (if publictly known), or better still, the exact birthdate, and year of death (if the person passed away, and better still, the exact date).
the top of the essay should contain the following list of mumbers (in that order):
[Number of Publications listed in MathSciNet, Number of Citations listed in MathSciNet, Year of First Publication, Year of Last listed publication, Erdos Number, Zeilberger Number, Number of PhD students]
The beginning of each of these essays shouls also have the link to that participant's homepage (if it exists) and/or the wikipedia page (if it exists).
The MathSciNet database is not free, but is freely available to Rutgers students and faculty. You just search for "Rutgers MathSciNet", and then use your
netid login to enter it.
The Mathematical Genealogy webisite is free.
For example, for the participant "Doron Zeilberger" (b. July 2, 1950), the list is
[222,2870,1971,2021,2,0,32], see under "Doron Zeilberger" below
See
- Row 1 (front) [from left to right]
-
Emil Grosswald
-
Carl Prather
-
James D. Louck
-
Alf van der Poorten
-
David M. Bressoud
-
George E. Andrews
-
Richard Askey
-
Nathan J. Fine
-
H.M. Srivastava
-
M. Ram Murty
-
John Friedlander
-
David Masson
-
Jonathan Borwein
-
Jet Wimp
-
Simcha Brudno,
-
Young Ju Choie
-
James Propp
-
J.S. Rao
- Row 2 [from left to right]
-
Wolfgang Schwarz
-
George Gasper
-
Bruce Berndt
-
Don Redmond
-
Michael Hischhorn
-
Frank Garvan
-
Cindi Garvan
-
Rodney Baxter
-
Charles van den Eynden
-
Dean Hickerson
-
Richard Guy
-
Carlo J. Moreno
-
Robert Rankin
-
Peter Swinnerton-Dyer
-
Peter Jao-shyong Shiue
-
Janice Malouf
-
Qi Yao
-
Eugene Ng
-
N.R. Nandakumar
- Row 3 [from left to right]
-
Jean Louis Nicolas
-
Tom H. Koornwinder
-
Gert Almkvist
-
Ken Stolarsky
-
Harold Diamond
-
Ferrel Wheeler
-
Louis W. Kolitsch
-
Morris Newman
-
James Hafner
-
Otto Ruehr
-
Reid Huntsinger
-
Charles Dunkl
-
Peter Paule
-
A.K. Agarwal
-
Lou Shituo
-
Kazuhiko Aomoto
- Row 4 [from left to right]
-
Victor Moll
-
Lisa Jacobsen
-
Liang-Cheng Zhang
-
Elmer K. Hayashi
-
Vencil Skarda
-
Fredric T. Howard
-
Peter Borwein
-
Kevin McCurley
-
Freeman Dyson
-
John Zucker
-
Anthony J. F. Biagioli
-
Stephen C. Milne
-
Xavier Gérard Viennot
-
Robert A. Gustafson
-
Doron Zeilberger (born July 2, 1950, wikipedia)
[222,2870,1971,2021,2,0,32]
essay (by no one)
-
Kevin W. J. Kadell
-
S.S. Rangachari
- Row 5 [from left to right]
-
Marvin Wunderlich
-
John Hawkins
-
Marvin Knopp
-
William R. Allaway
-
Joseph Lehner
-
Paul Bateman
-
Samuel S. Wagstaff, Jr.
-
Y. -F. S. Petermann
-
Amitahba Tripathi
-
Kathleen M. O'Hara
-
Adolf Hildebrand
-
Alayne Parson
-
Rolf Müller
-
Barry Cipra
-
Katsuhisa Mimachi
- Row 6 [from left to right]
-
Chris K. Caldwell
-
John McKay
-
Paul Erdös (March 26, 1913-Sept. 20, 1996, wiki)
[1445,21817,1934,2015,2,0,2,4]
essay (by No one)
-
M. Rahman [There are quite a few mathmematicians with that name (e.g. the famous Mizan Rahman, probably not the same person), make sure that it is the right one, in 1987 he was at Eastern Illinois University]
-
Karl-Heinz Indlekofer
-
John Brillhart
-
Kailish Misra
-
James Vaughn
-
Matthew Richey
-
Bruce Reznick
-
Dennis Stanton
-
John Greene
-
Michael Filaseta
-
Ronald J. Evans
-
Daniel S. Moak
History of Math (Fall 2021) class web-page