Carl S. Herz

Carl Samuel Herz (10 April 1930 – 1 May 1995) was an American-Canadian mathematician, specializing in harmonic analysis. His name is attached to the Herz–Schur multiplier. He held professorships at Cornell University and McGill University, where he was Peter Redpath Professor of Mathematics at the time of his death.

Carl S. Herz
Carl S. Herz
BornApril 10, 1930
Rockville Center, Long Island, NY, USA
DiedMay 1, 1995
Montreal, Quebec, CA
CitizenshipUnited States
Canada
Alma materCornell University, B.Sc.
Princeton University, Ph.D.
Known forHerz-Schur multiplier
SpouseJudith Scherer Herz
ChildrenRachel Sarah Herz
Nathaniel Herz
AwardsRoyal Society of Canada
Jeffery-Williams Prize
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
Harmonic Analysis
InstitutionsCornell University
McGill University
Doctoral advisorSalomon Bochner

Education and career

Herz received his bachelor's degree from Cornell University in 1950 and continued on as a mathematics graduate student at Princeton University. There he received a Ph.D. under the supervision of Salomon Bochner in 1953 with the dissertation "Bessel Functions of Matrix Argument".[1] According to Tom H. Koornwinder, Herz's dissertation (published in the Annals of Mathematics in May 1955) "was a pioneering paper in the field of special functions in several variables associated with Lie groups and with root systems."[2] Herz returned to Cornell as an instructor, rising in rank to assistant professor in 1955, associate professor in 1958, and full professor in 1963. He remained at Cornell until 1969. During the academic year 1969–1970 he worked at Brandeis University and then in 1970 joined the faculty of McGill University as full professor, where he remained until his death in 1995. During the academic year 1962–1963 Herz was a Sloan Fellow at Université de Paris-Sud at Orsay, where he established close ties with mathematicians there that led to frequent academic visits at Orsay of a month or two each year. In the academic years 1957–1958 and 1976–1977 he was a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study.

Herz did mathematical research on spectral synthesis, positive-definite functions, Fourier transforms on convex sets, potential theory, Hp, and BMO. According to Nicholas Varopoulos, Herz made contributions "to the theory of symmetric spaces, Lie groups and the heat kernel on these; among other things he succeeded in classifying all faithful representations of Lie groups by contact transformations of a compact manifold."[3]

In 1978 he was elected of a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. In 1986 he was awarded the Jeffery–Williams Prize by the Canadian Mathematical Society. He was the president of the Canadian Mathematical Society in 1987–1989.[4] The Institut des sciences mathématiques, a consortium of eight Quebec universities of which Herz was Director at the time of his death, established the Carl Herz Prize in his honor.[5]

Personal life

Herz met Judith Scherer, a Professor of English, while teaching at Cornell. They were married in 1960. They had two children, Rachel and Nathaniel. Rachel is a psychologist and cognitive neuroscientist, specializing in the psychology of smell. Nathaniel is a trained lawyer working as web developer.

Selected publications

References

  1. Carl Herz at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. Koornwinder, T. H. (12 September 1996). "Death of Carl Herz". OP–SF WEB.
  3. "Carl Herz 1930--1995" (PDF). Notices of the AMS. 43 (7): 768–771. July 1996.
  4. Carl Herz, ISM Archived February 27, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  5. The Carl Herz Prize, Institut des sciences mathématiques. Archived February 27, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
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