Henri Paul Cartan (8 July 1904 – 13 August 2008) was a French mathematician who made substantial contributions to algebraic topology.

Quotes about Henri Cartan

  • The theory of functions of several complex variables has gone from its infancy with the work of Hartogs, Levi and Poincaré shortly after the turn of the century to its current role as a central field of modern mathematics, much as its predecessor, function theory in one complex variable, did in the 19th century. A central figure in this development has been Henri Cartan, whose series of papers in this field starting in the 1920's dealt with fundamental questions relating to Nevanlinna theory, generalizations of the Mittag-Leffler and Weierstrass theorems to functions of several variables, problems concerned with biholomorphic mappings and the biholomorphic equivalence problem, domains of holomorphy and holomorphic convexity, etc. The major developments in the theory from 1930 to 1950 came from Cartan and his school in France, Behnke's school in Münster, and Oka in Japan. The central ideas up to that time were synthesized in Cartan's Séminaires in the early 1950's, and these were very influential to the next several generations of mathematicians. Cartan's accomplishments were broad and he influenced mathematics through his writing, his teaching, his seminars, and his students in a remarkable manner.
    • R Remmert and J-P Serre (eds.), Henri Cartan Oeuvres (3 vols.) (Berlin-New York, 1979).

Mathematics
Mathematicians
(by country)

Abel Anaxagoras Archimedes Aristarchus of Samos Averroes Arnold Banach Cantor Cartan Cohen Descartes Diophantus Erdős Euclid Euler Fourier Gauss Gödel Grassmann Grothendieck Hamilton Hilbert Hypatia Lagrange Laplace Leibniz Milnor Newton von Neumann Noether Penrose Perelman Poincaré Pólya Pythagoras Riemann Russell Schwartz Serre Tao Tarski Thales Turing Wiles Witten

Numbers

1 23 360 e π Fibonacci numbers Irrational number Negative number Number Prime number Quaternion

Concepts

Abstraction Algorithms Axiomatic system Completeness Deductive reasoning Differential equation Dimension Ellipse Elliptic curve Exponential growth Infinity Integration Geodesic Induction Proof Partial differential equation Principle of least action Prisoner's dilemma Probability Randomness Theorem Topological space Wave equation

Results

Euler's identity Fermat's Last Theorem

Pure math

Abstract algebra Algebra Analysis Algebraic geometry (Sheaf theory) Algebraic topology Arithmetic Calculus Category theory Combinatorics Commutative algebra Complex analysis Differential calculus Differential geometry Differential topology Ergodic theory Foundations of mathematics Functional analysis Game theory Geometry Global analysis Graph theory Group theory Harmonic analysis Homological algebra Invariant theory Logic Non-Euclidean geometry Nonstandard analysis Number theory Numerical analysis Operations research Representation theory Ring theory Set theory Sheaf theory Statistics Symplectic geometry Topology

Applied math

Computational fluid dynamics Econometrics Fluid mechanics Mathematical physics Science

History of math

Ancient Greek mathematics Euclid's Elements History of algebra History of calculus History of logarithms Indian mathematics Principia Mathematica

Other

Mathematics and mysticism Mathematics education Mathematics, from the points of view of the Mathematician and of the Physicist Philosophy of mathematics Unification in science and mathematics


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