Vladimir Boltyansky
Vladimir Grigorevich Boltyansky (Template:Lang-ru; born 26 April 1925), also transliterated as Boltyanski, Boltyanskii, or Boltjansky, is a Soviet and Russian mathematician, educator and author of popular mathematical books and articles. He is best known for his books on topology, combinatorial geometry and Hilbert's third problem.
Biography
Boltyansky was born to Jewish parents in Moscow.[1] He served in the Soviet army during World War II, when he was a signaller on the 2nd Belorussian Front.[2] He graduated from Moscow University in 1948, where his advisor was Lev Pontryagin. He defended his "Doktor nauk in physics and mathematics" (higher doctorate) degree in 1955, became a professor in 1959.
Boltyansky was awarded the Lenin Prize (for the work led by Pontryagin, Revaz Gamkrelidze, and Evgenii Mishchenko ) for applications of differential equations to optimal control.[when?] In 1967 he received Uzbek SSR prize for the work on ordered rings. He currently teaches at CIMAT.[3]
He is the corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Education. He is the author of over 200 books and mathematical articles.
References
- ^ Lev Pontyagin's memoirs, p. 214.
- ^ 60 Anniversary World War II Celebrations
- ^ Faculty profile, CIMAT, retrieved 2014-01-19.
External links
- Use dmy dates from March 2011
- 1925 births
- Writers from Moscow
- Living people
- 20th-century Russian mathematicians
- Lenin Prize winners
- Moscow State University alumni
- Russian Jews
- Russian science writers
- Russian mathematicians
- Corresponding Members of the USSR Academy of Pedagogical Sciences
- Academicians of the Russian Academy of Education
- Soviet Jews
- Soviet mathematicians
- Soviet military personnel of World War II