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Bernard Maurey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bernard Maurey (born 1948)[1] is a French mathematician who deals with functional analysis and especially the theory of Banach spaces.

He received in 1973 his Ph.D. from the University Paris VII (Denis Diderot) under Laurent Schwartz with thesis Théorèmes de factorisation pour les opérateurs linéaires à valeurs dans les espaces Lp.[2][3] Maurey is a professor at the University of Paris VII and a member of the CNRS's Laboratoire d'Analyse et de Mathématiques Appliquées of the University of Marne-la-Vallée. He was an Invited Speaker of the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1974 in Vancouver.

He introduced stable Banach spaces in 1981 with Jean-Louis Krivine.[4][5] In 1992, with Timothy Gowers, Maurey resolved the "unconditional basic sequence problem" in the theory of Banach spaces, by showing that not every infinite-dimensional Banach space has an infinite-dimensional subspace that admits an unconditional Schauder basis.[6]

References

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  1. ^ Pietsch, Albrecht (2007). History of Banach spaces and linear operators. Springer. p. 653. ISBN 978-0-8176-4596-0.
  2. ^ Ledoux, Michel; Talagrand, Michel (2002). Probability in Banach Spaces: Isoperimetry and Processes. Springer. p. 472. ISBN 978-3-540-52013-9.
  3. ^ Bernard Maurey at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. ^ Krivine, Jean-Louis; Maurey, Bernard (1981). "Espaces de Banach stables". Israel Journal of Mathematics. 39 (4): 273–295. doi:10.1007/BF02761674.
  5. ^ Guerre-Delabriere, Sylvia (1992). Classical sequences in Banach spaces. Monographs and textbooks in pure and applied mathematics, vol. 166. CRC Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-8247-8723-3.
  6. ^ Gowers, William Timothy; Maurey, Bernard (1993). "The unconditional basic sequence problem". Journal of the American Mathematical Society. 6 (4): 851–874. arXiv:math/9205204. doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-1993-1201238-0.
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