Chudnovsky brothers

David Volfovich Chudnovsky (born 1947 in Kiev) and Gregory Volfovich Chudnovsky (born 1952 in Kiev) are American mathematicians and engineers known for their world-record mathematical calculations and developing the Chudnovsky algorithm used to calculate the digits of π with extreme precision.

Careers in mathematics

A 1992 article in The New Yorker quoted the opinion of several mathematicians that Gregory Chudnovsky is one of the world's best living mathematicians. David Chudnovsky works closely with and assists his brother Gregory, who has myasthenia gravis.[1]

The Chudnovsky brothers have held records, at different times, for computing π to the largest number of places, including two billion digits in the early 1990s on a supercomputer they built (dubbed "m-zero") in their apartment in Manhattan. In 1987, the Chudnovsky brothers developed the algorithm (now called the Chudnovsky algorithm) that they used to break several π computation records. Today, this algorithm is used by Mathematica to calculate π, and has continued to be used by others who have achieved world records in pi calculation.

The brothers also assisted the Metropolitan Museum of Art around 2003 in the merging of a series of digital photographs taken of The Hunt of the Unicorn tapestries during their cleaning.[2] PBS aired a program on its science show Nova, hosted by Robert Krulwich, that described the difficulties in photographing the tapestries and the math used to fix them.[3]

The brothers are currently Distinguished Industry Professors at the New York University Tandon School of Engineering. Gregory was awarded the MacArthur Fellowship (also known as the "Genius Grant") in 1981.

gollark: No, pretty sure they exist in /var/lib/docker somewhere.
gollark: I don't think it would be much more than the size of the binary being run in the container. Maybe a bit more due to something something shared libraries.
gollark: And nice iterators.
gollark: Plus Rust has algebraic data types.
gollark: Non-manual memory management also makes it easier to reason about code and not put `free`s everywhere.

References

  1. Preston, Richard (March 1, 1992). "The Mountains of Pi". The New Yorker.
  2. "NOVA Science NOW". PBS. 2005-07-26.
  3. Preston, Richard (2005-04-11). "Capturing the Unicorn". The New Yorker.
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