James J. Andrews (mathematician)

James J. Andrews (March 18, 1930 – July 28, 1998) was an American mathematician, a professor of mathematics at Florida State University who specialized in knot theory, topology, and group theory.[1]

Andrews was born March 18, 1930, in Seneca Falls, New York.[1] He did his undergraduate studies at Hofstra College,[1] and earned his doctorate in 1957 from the University of Georgia under the supervision of M. K. Fort, Jr.[2] He worked at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the University of Georgia, and the University of Washington before joining the FSU faculty in 1961. Andrews was a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in 1963-64.[3] From 1965-67, he looked into cryptology research at the Institute for Defense Analysis, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California. He retired in 1994,[1][4] and died July 28, 1998, in Tallahassee, Florida.[1][5]

Andrews is known with Morton L. Curtis for the Andrews–Curtis conjecture concerning Nielsen transformations of balanced group presentations.[1] Andrews and Curtis formulated the conjecture in a 1965 paper;[6] it remains open.

References

  1. Sumners, De Witt (October 1998), "Mathematics professor James Andrews", Florida State Times, 4, archived from the original on August 19, 2012.
  2. James J. Andrews at the Mathematics Genealogy Project.
  3. Institute for Advanced Study: A Community of Scholars Archived 2013-01-06 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Retired faculty, Florida State University General Bulletin 1998-1999, retrieved 2011-07-13. Backed up to Internet Archive Wayback Machine
  5. View from the Chair, Florida State University Mathematics Department, Spring 2000, retrieved 2011-07-13.
  6. Andrews, J. J.; Curtis, M. L. (1965), "Free groups and handlebodies", Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 16 (2): 192–195, doi:10.2307/2033843, JSTOR 2033843, MR 0173241.
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