Bertram John Walsh

Bertram John Walsh (born 7 May 1938) is an American mathematician, specializing in locally convex spaces, harmonic analysis, and partial differential equations.

After receiving his bachelor's degree from Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Walsh received in 1960 his master's degree[1] and in 1963 his PhD from the University of Michigan. His doctoral dissertation Structures of Spectral Measures on Locally Convex Spaces was written under the supervision of Helmut H. Schaefer.[2] In the 1960s Walsh was a member of the mathematics faculty at UCLA. He moved to Rutgers University, where he is now a professor emeritus.

In 1974 he was an Invited Speaker with talk The Theory of Harmonic Spaces at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Vancouver.[3]

Selected publications

gollark: A cool but also still impractical alternative to batteries for solar would just be to have a giant ring of solar panels around the planet, linked with superconductors.
gollark: (or nuclear if people weren't irrationally scared of it)
gollark: You would be able to drop the batteries, and drive with unlimited range as long as there was a satellite available to point at you.
gollark: It might also cook the passenger, but that's a small price to pay for PROGRESS!
gollark: The *correct* way would of course be orbital satellites which generate a microwave beam focused on your Tesla, which it can then convert back to electricity.

References

  1. Commencement Programs. University of Michigan. 1960.
  2. Bertram John Walsh at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Walsh, Bertram (1975). "The Theory of Harmonic Spaces". In: Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Vancouver, 1974. vol. 2. pp. 183–186.


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