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Felix Gantmacher ((ロシア語:Феликс Рувимович Гантмахер)) (23 February 1908, Odessa – 16 May 1964) was a Soviet mathematician, professor at Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, well known for his contributions in mechanics, matrix theory and Lie group theory. In 1925–1926 he participated in seminar guided by Nikolai Chebotaryov in Odessa and wrote his first research paper in 1926. His book ''Theory of Matrices'' (1953) is a standard reference of matrix theory. It has been translated into various languages including a two-volume version in English prepared by Joel Lee Brenner, Donald W. Bushaw, and S. Evanusa. George Herbert Weiss noted that "this book cannot be recommended too highly as it contains material otherwise unavailable in book form".〔George Weiss (1960) Review ''Applications of the Theory of Matrices'', Science 131: 405,6, issue #3398〕 Gantmacher collaborated with Mark Krein on ''Oscillation Matrices and Kernels and Small Vibrations of Mechanical Systems''. In 1939 he contributed to the classification problem of the real Lie algebras. In the same year he wrote on automorphisms of complex Lie groups. His son Vsevolod Gantmacher is a noted physicist. == Publication == * 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Felix Gantmacher」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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