Friederich Ignaz Mautner

Friederich Ignaz Mautner (1921–1996)[1] was an Austrian-American mathematician, known for his research on the representation theory of groups, functional analysis, and differential geometry.

Friederich I. Mautner
Born1921
Died1996
NationalityAustrian American
Alma materPrinceton University
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsJohns Hopkins University
Doctoral advisorJohn von Neumann
Doctoral studentsJoseph Shalika

Mautner, a Jew, emigrated from Austria after the Anschluss via the U.K. and Ireland to the U.S.A. He received in 1948 a Ph.D. from Princeton University with thesis Unitary Representations of Infinite Groups.[2] He taught at Johns Hopkins University and then at the University of Paris and in Italy.

Mautner was an assistant at the Queen's University Belfast and a scholar at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies in 1944–1946.[3] He was a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in 1946/47, 1954/56, and 1965/66.[4] He was a Guggenheim Fellow in the academic year 1954/55.

He is known for Mautner's Lemma and Mautner's Phenomenon[5] in the representation theory of Lie groups. Mautner's work on the lemma and the phenomenon was done in connection with the ergodic theory of geodesic flows.[6] With a ground-breaking paper in 1958, Mautner became an important pioneer in the representation theory of reducible p-adic groups.[7] The Mautner Group, a special five-dimensional Lie group, is named after him.[8]

His doctoral students include Joseph Shalika.

Selected works

gollark: Also, they have native async/await syntax, although if the ES team were *cool* they would just implement do notation.
gollark: Yes, that's right. Promises are a monoid in the category of endofunctors.
gollark: Promises are very nice because MONAD.
gollark: Quite a lot of browser APIs are weirdly inconsistent, because they only came up with the whole "asynchronous" thing after a lot had already been done, and then a while after that the idea of promises, but they're still sticking with events a lot for some reason.
gollark: JS is what you get if you put 100 language designers in a room, remove the language designers and add a bunch of monkeys with typewriters and DVORAK keyboards, and then bring the actual language designers back but force them to stick with what the monkeys wrote and only make small changes and tack on extra features after the fact, and also the language designers don't agree with each other most of the time.

References

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