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jointly with colleagues.
jointly with colleagues.


Dr. Hilton is featured in Mathematical People, published by Birkhauser (Boston) 1985).
Dr. Hilton is featured in Mathematical People. <ref> D. Albers and G.L. Alexanderson, Mathematical People, Birkhauser, Boston, 1995. ISBN 0817631917</ref>


==Additional Academic Positions Held==
==Additional Academic Positions Held==

Revision as of 22:48, 9 November 2010

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Peter John Hilton (7 April 1923[1]– 6 November 2010[2]) was a British mathematician, noted for his contributions to homotopy theory.

Life

Hilton was born in London, and educated at St Paul's School.[3] He won a scholarship to The Queen's College, Oxford in 1940.[3]

During World War II, as an undergraduate, Hilton was obliged to enrol in training with the Royal Artillery, and was scheduled for conscription in Summer 1942.[4] Instead, he was interviewed by a team touring universities looking for mathematicians with knowledge of German, and was offered a position in the Foreign Office without being told the nature of the work. The team was, in fact, recruiting on behalf of the Government Code and Cypher School. He accepted, and, aged 18, arrived at wartime codebreaking station Bletchley Park on 12 January 1942.[5]

He was initially put to work on Naval Enigma in Hut 8. In late 1942, he transferred to work on German teleprinter ciphers.[4] A special section known as the "Testery" had been formed in July 1942 to work on one such cipher, codenamed "Tunny", and Hilton was one of early members of the group.[6] His role was to devise ways to deal with changes in Tunny, and to liaise with another section working on Tunny, the "Newmanry", which complemented the hand-methods of the Testery with specialised codebreaking machinery.[6]

Hilton obtained his DPhil in 1949 from Oxford University under the supervision of John Henry Whitehead. His dissertation was titled, "Calculation of the Homotopy Groups of An2-polyhedra".[7]

In 1958, he became the Mason Professor of Pure Mathematics at the University of Birmingham.[3] He moved to the United States in 1962 to be Professor of Mathematics at Cornell University, a post he held until 1971.[1] From 1971 to 1973, he held a joint appointment as Fellow of the Battelle Seattle Research Center and Professor of Mathematics at the University of Washington. September 1, 1972, he was appointed Louis D. Beaumont University Professor at Case Western Reserve University. September 1, 1973, he took up the appointment. In 1982, he was appointed Distinguished Professor of Mathematics at Binghamton University, becoming Emeritus in 2003. Latterly he spent each spring semester as Distinguished Professor of Mathematics at the University of Central Florida.

Hilton constructed the 51-letter palindrome, "Doc note, I dissent. A fast never prevents a fatness. I diet on cod."[8]

Dr. Hilton’s principal research interests were in algebraic topology, homological algebra, categorical algebra, and mathematics education. He has published 15 books and over 600 articles in these areas, some jointly with colleagues.

Dr. Hilton is featured in Mathematical People. [9]

Additional Academic Positions Held

Professional Memberships

Honors

Positions Held

  • Member, Phi Beta Kappa Speakers Panel
  • Consultant, John Wiley and Sons, Inc.
  • Consultant, SRA/McGraw Hill Publishing Company
  • Consultant, Children’s Television Workshop
  • Chairman, International Advisory Board, Institut des Sciences Mathématiques, Montréal
  • Editor, Publicacions Mathemàtiques
  • Editor, Expositiones Mathematicae
  • Editor, International Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences
  • Editor, Mathematical Reports

Recent Positions Held

  • Member, American Mathematical Society Committee on Human Rights of Mathematics
  • Chairman, Mathematical Association of America Committee on Award for Distinguished Service
  • Chairman, Mathematical Association of America Committee on Award of Chauvenet Prize
  • Member, Mathematical Association of America Panel on Remediation
  • Member, Mathematical Association of America Panel on Public Representation
  • Member, Advisory Committee on Mathematics and Science, Council for Basic Education
  • Secretary, International Commission of Mathematical Instruction
  • Editor, NICO (Brussels)
  • Consultant, National Institute of Education, Department of Health Education And Welfare
  • Chairman, United States National Research Council Committee on Applied Mathematical Training
  • Member, United States Commission on Mathematical Instruction, National Research Council
  • Chairman, Mathematical Association of America Committee on National Awards
  • Principal Editor, Ergebnisse der Mathematik Series, published by Springer Verlag
  • EdChairman, National Advisory Board, Comprehensive School Mathematics Project
  • Member, Committee on the Undergraduate Program in Mathematics, Mathematical Association of America
  • Chairman, National Research Council Committee on Graduate and Postdoctoral Training in Mathematics
  • Chairman, United States Commission on Mathematical Instruction, National Research Council
  • Member, Teacher Training Panel, Committee on the Undergraduate Program in Mathematics, Mathematical Association of America
  • Joint Chairman, Cambridge Conference on School Mathematics
  • Member, National Advisory Committee, Boston University Mathematics Project
  • Member, Committee on Films, Mathematical Association of America
  • Member, Subcommittee on Translations, Mathematical Association of America
  • Member, Committee on Postdoctoral Fellowships, American Mathematical Society
  • Chairman, New York State Department of Education Panel on Ph.D. Program in Mathematics (September, 1976)
  • Editor, Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra
  • Chairman, Committee to Select Phi Beta Kappa Book Award in Science

Books

  • Peter J. Hilton, An introduction to homotopy theory, Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics and Mathematical Physics, no. 43, Cambridge, at the University Press, 1953. ISBN 0521052653 MR0056289
  • Peter J. Hilton, Shaun Wylie, Homology theory: An introduction to algebraic topology, Cambridge University Press, New York, 1960. ISBN 0521094224 MR0115161
  • Peter Hilton, Homotopy theory and duality, Gordon and Breach, New York-London-Paris, 1965 ISBN 0677002955 MR0198466
  • Peter J. Hilton, Guido Mislin, Joe Roitberg, Localization of nilpotent groups and spaces, North-Holland Publishing Co., Amsterdam-Oxford, 1975. ISBN 0444107762 MR0478146
  • Peter J. Hilton, Urs Stammbach, A course in homological algebra. Second edition, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol 4, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1997. ISBN 0-387-94823-6 MR1438546

References

  1. ^ a b Peter Hilton, "On all Sorts of Automorphisms", The American Mathematical Monthly, 92(9), November 1985, p. 650
  2. ^ Obituaries: Peter Hinton, November 8, 2010, retrieved 9 Octoober 2010 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  3. ^ a b c "About the speaker", announcement of a lecture given by Peter Hilton at Bletchley Park on 12 July 2006, accessed 18 January 2007.
  4. ^ a b Peter Hilton, "Living with Fish: Breaking Tunny in the Newmanry and the Testery", p. 190 from pp. 189-203 in Jack Copeland ed, Colossus: The Secrets of Bletchley Park's Codebreaking Computers, Oxford University Press, 2006.
  5. ^ Hilton, "Living with Fish", p. 189
  6. ^ a b Jerry Roberts, "Major Tester's Section", p. 250 of pp. 249-259 in Jack Copeland ed, Colossus: The Secrets of Bletchley Park's Codebreaking Computers, Oxford University Press, 2006.
  7. ^ David Joyner and David Kahn, editors, "Edited Transcript of Interview with Peter Hilton for Secrets of War", in Cryptologia 30(3), July–September 2006, pp. 236–250.
  8. ^ Jack Good, "Enigma and Fish", p. 160 from pp. 149-166 in F. H. Hinsley and Alan Strip, editors, Codebreakers: The Inside Story of Bletchley Park, 1993.
  9. ^ D. Albers and G.L. Alexanderson, Mathematical People, Birkhauser, Boston, 1995. ISBN 0817631917
  10. ^ Contemporary Mathematics 37, AMS, 1985

Hilton's former PhD students

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