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Frederick Valentine Atkinson : ウィキペディア英語版 | Frederick Valentine Atkinson
Frederick Valentine Atkinson (Pinner, 25 January 1916 – Toronto, 13 November 2002) was a British mathematician, formerly of the University of Toronto, Canada, where he spent most of his career. Atkinson's theorem and Atkinson–Wilcox theorem are named after him. His Ph.D. advisor at Oxford was Edward Charles Titchmarsh. ==Early life and education== The following synopsis is condensed (with permission) from Mingarelli's tribute to (F. V. Atkinson ): He attended St. Paul’s School in West Kensington from 1929-1934 (in the same place that educated the poet John Milton, Samuel Pepys, mathematicians J. E. Littlewood, FRS, and G.N. Watson FRS. The High Master of St. Paul’s once wrote of Atkinson: “Extremely promising: He should make a brilliant mathematician”! Atkinson attended The Queen's College, Oxford in 1934 with a scholarship. During his stay at Queen's, he was secretary of the Chinese Student Society, and a member of the Indian Student Society. Auto-didactic when it came to languages, he taught himself and became fluent in Latin, Ancient Greek, Urdu, German, Hungarian, and Russian with some proficiency in Spanish, Italian, and French. His dissertation at Oxford in 1939 established, among other such results, asymptotic formulae for the average value of the square of the Riemann zeta function on the critical line. His final Examining Board at Oxford University consisted of G.H. Hardy, J.E. Littlewood and E.C. Titchmarsh.
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