http://ias.edu/midcom-serveattachmentguid-4dfd1bcede05ee4eef850475499742d0/Atle_Selberg.jpgselberg (1917-2007)于八月六日离开了我们" />PRINCETON, N.J., August 9, 2007 --
Renowned Norwegian mathematician Atle Selberg,
Professor Emeritus in the School
of Mathematics at the Institute for Advanced Study, died on the
evening of August 6 at his home in Princeton, NJ.
He was 90.
Throughout a career spanning more than six decades, Professor
Selberg made significant contributions to modular forms, Riemann
and other zeta functions, analytic number theory, sieve methods,
discrete groups, and trace formula. The impact of his work is
evident from the many mathematical terms that bear his name: The
Selberg Trace Formula, The Selberg Sieve, The Selberg Integral, The
Selberg Class, The Rankin-Selberg L-Function, The Selberg
Eigenvalue Conjecture, and The Selberg Zeta Function.
"Atle's passing marks a great loss, both to the Institute and to
the larger scientific community," commented Peter Goddard, Director
of the Institute. "His far-reaching contributions
have left a profound imprint on the world of mathematics, and we
have lost not only a mathematical giant, but a dear friend."
Peter
Sarnak, Professor in the School of Mathematics, noted, "The
20th century was blessed with a number of very talented
mathematicians, and of those, there are a few who I would say had a
golden touch. In any topic about which they
thought in depth, they saw further and uncovered much more --
seemingly effortlessly -- than the generations before
them. Their work set the stage for many future
developments. Atle was one such mathematician; he
was a mathematician's mathematician."
Widely regarded as one of the world's greatest analytic number
theorists, Selberg first came to the Institute for Advanced Study
from Norway in 1947 at the invitation of Carl Ludwig Siegel, who
noted that, at 31 years of age, Selberg "already had earned his
place in the history of science in the 20th
century." After a year at the Institute, Selberg
took a post as Associate Professor at Syracuse University,
returning to the Institute in 1949 as a permanent
Member. In 1951, he was appointed Professor in
the Institute's School of Mathematics, and he was named Professor
Emeritus in 1987.
During the 1940s, his work centered around the
theory of the Riemann Zeta Function and related problems concerning
the distribution of prime numbers. The celebrated
Riemann Hypothesis states that all the "non-trivial" zeros of The
Riemann Zeta Function lie on the line in the complex plane
consisting of numbers of the form ½ +
it, where t real is a real
number. This central problem remains unsolved to
this day. Developing fundamental, new techniques,
Selberg showed that a positive proportion of these infinitely many
zeros lie on this line. These ideas led him to
his powerful and novel sieving methods and in 1948 to his
celebrated Selberg Formula and to the elementary proof of the Prime
Number Theorem. The last took the mathematical
community by surprise as such a proof had been sought since the
formulation of the problem by Legendre and Gauss some 150 years
before. For these works, Selberg was awarded the
prestigious Fields Medal in 1950.
In the early 1950s, Selberg turned his attention to
the spectral theory of automorphic forms. His
1956 paper in the Journal of the Indian Mathematical
Society introduced, among other things, what is known today as
The Selberg Trace Formula. According to the
Professor Sarnak, "This is one of the most influential mathematical
papers of the 20th century. It lays the
foundations and many of the tools on which the modern theory of
automorphic forms, with its many spectacular applications, rests."
His work in automorphic forms led him in 1960 to
the discovery of an unexpected phenomenon of the rigidity of
lattices in higher rank Lie groups. This
phenomenon was developed much further by a number of mathematicians
and it is a central theme in modern geometry and group
theory. Selberg continued to lecture, elaborate,
and develop new aspects of the many topics that he pioneered until
well into his 80s.
In 1987, nearly one hundred mathematicians from all
over the world convened in Oslo, Norway, for a symposium in honor
of Selberg's 70th birthday. In the preface to the
collection of the 29 papers presented at the symposium and
published by Academic Press in 1989, fellow mathematician Karl Egil
Aubert extolled Selberg's "many-sided achievements [that] place him
squarely as one of the truly great mathematicians of the 20th
century."
In his more than five decades at the Institute, Selberg
maintained an understated view on his highly significant
accomplishments in the field. In 1990, he noted,
"I think the things I have done...although sometimes there were
technical details, and sometimes even a lot of calculation, in some
of my early work...the basic ideas were rather simple always, and
could be explained in rather simple terms...in some ways, I
probably have a rather simplistic mind, so that these are the only
kind of ideas I can work with. I don't think that
other people have had grave difficulties understanding my
work."
Enrico
Bombieri, IBM von Neumann Professor in the School of
Mathematics at the Institute, has described the hallmark of
Selberg's style as "simplicity and elegance of method, [and]
powerful results. He had an uncanny ability to
see immediately what was at the core of an issue.
This ability was by no means restricted to scientific matters."
In celebration of Selberg's 90th birthday in June
2007, the Institute invited his close colleagues and friends to
salute his lifetime of achievement. Amongst those
who spoke at this event was School of Mathematics Member Nils Baas,
who conveyed the congratulations of the Norwegian government and
proposed a toast to "Atle Selberg - a great
Norwegian." Selberg himself spoke animatedly and
at length at the event, and noted of the Institute's early days,
"The whole complement of people in the Institute was very small.
By and large, everybody knew everybody.
Even I knew everybody."
Selberg, who was born on June 14, 1917, in
Langesund, Norway, was the youngest of nine children of Anna
Kristina Selberg, a teacher, and Ole Michael Selberg, an educator
and mathematician. His siblings became teachers
and academics, including brothers Henrik and Sigmund,
mathematicians who were both members of the Norwegian Academy of
Sciences and Letters; Henrik was a Member at the Institute for
Advanced Study in 1963-64. Selberg's childhood
and youth were spent in Norway, in Voss, Bergen, and
Gjøvik. At the age of 13, he
began to study mathematics using his father's extensive library,
where he discovered Leibnitz's series for
π/4 = 1 - 1/3 + 1/5 - 1/7..., later
describing it as "such a very strange and beautiful relationship
that I determined I would read that book in order to find out how
this formula came about."
In 1934, Selberg came upon a copy of the collected works of
Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan, which an older brother
had brought home with him from school. When he
attended the Ramanujan Centenary Conference at the Tata Institute
of Fundamental Research in 1988, Selberg acknowledged this as a
transformative moment in his life. At age 17,
Selberg wrote his first article, "On Some Arithmetical
Identities." The next year, he began his
education at the University of Oslo, where he submitted the paper
for review to one of his professors. A year
later, the article was published.
By the time Selberg obtained his Ph.D. in 1943, also at the
University of Oslo, he had published eleven more articles, the
later ones focusing on Riemann's Zeta
Function. His paper on The Selberg Integral dates
from this period and it is his only paper in Norwegian; it took
more than thirty years to be recognized for its
importance. He defended his dissertation in
November of 1943, shortly before the German occupying forces closed
down the University for the duration of the war.
He had been appointed a research fellow at the University of Oslo
in 1942, the year before he received his
doctorate. Selberg remained in this post until
1947, when he married Hedvig Liebermann of Tirgu Mures,
Transylvania, and moved to the United States.
During the Second World War he worked in isolation due to the
occupation of Norway by the Nazis, but after the war, his
accomplishments in the theory of the Riemann Zeta Function became
known.
In addition to the 1950 Fields Medal, Selberg's contributions to
the field of mathematics have been widely recognized, including an
honorary doctorate from the University of Trondheim (1972) and the
Wolf Prize in Mathematics (1986), which is bestowed annually for
outstanding achievements in agriculture, chemistry, mathematics,
medicine, physics, and the arts. He was inducted
into the Royal Norwegian Academy of Sciences and Letters, the Royal
Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, the Royal Swedish Academy
of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Indian
National Science Academy, and was named an honorary member of the
London Mathematical Society. In 1987, Selberg was
named a Knight Commander with Star of the Royal Order of Saint
Olav.
The publication of the collected papers of Atle
Selberg in two volumes (1989, 1991, Springer) was warmly welcomed
by the mathematical community for Selberg's profound influence on
mathematics, especially analytic number theory.
The publication made available his papers up to
1947, which had previously appeared mostly in Norwegian series or
journals of limited distribution.
Selberg's first wife, Hedvig, worked at the Institute for
Advanced Study in the 1950s in the group headed by John von
Neumann, and later at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory until
the 1980s; she died in 1995. He is survived by his second wife
Betty Compton Selberg of Princeton; his two children from his first
marriage, daughter Ingrid Maria Selberg and son-in-law Mustapha
Matura of London, and son Lars Atle Selberg and daughter-in-law
Julia Selberg of Middlefield, Connecticut; his two stepdaughters
Heidi Faith of Mountain View, California, and Cindy Faith of Roland
Park, Maryland; and his grandchildren Cayal Mathura, Maya Kristina
Mathura, Atle Michael Selberg, and Katharine Rowley Selberg.
Details about a memorial will be made available at a later
date.