Martin Aigner

Martin Aigner (born February 28, 1942 in Linz) is an Austrian mathematician, professor at Freie Universität Berlin since 1974, with interests in combinatorial mathematics and graph theory.[1][2]

Martin Aigner
Aigner in 2004
Born (1942-02-28) 28 February 1942
Linz, Austria
NationalityAustrian
OccupationMathematician

He received Ph.D from the University of Vienna. His book Proofs from THE BOOK (co-written with Günter M. Ziegler) has been translated into 12 languages.[3]

He is a recipient of a 1996 Lester R. Ford Award from the MAA for his expository article Turán's Graph Theorem.[4] In 2018 received the Leroy P. Steele Prize for Mathematical Exposition (jointly with Günter M. Ziegler).[5]

Bibliography

  • Combinatorial Theory (1997 reprint: ISBN 3-540-61787-6, 1979: ISBN 3-540-90376-3; )
  • (with Günter M. Ziegler) Proofs from THE BOOK
    • Springer, Berlin, 1998, ISBN 3-540-63698-6
    • in German: Das BUCH der Beweise, 2nd edition: 2003, ISBN 3-540-40185-7
  • A Course in Enumeration, 2007, ISBN 3-540-39032-4
  • Discrete Mathematics, 2007, ISBN 0-8218-4151-3
  • Mathematics Everywhere. Martin Aigner (Author, Editor), Ehrhard Behrends (Editor), 2010
  • Alles Mathematik: Von Pythagoras zum CD-player, by Martin Aigner, Ehrhard Behrends, 2008, ISBN 3-8348-0416-9
  • Combinatorial search. Teubner, Stuttgart 1988, ISBN 3-519-02109-9
  • Graphentheorie. Eine Entwicklung aus dem 4-Farben-Problem. Teubner, Stuttgart 1984, ISBN 3-519-02068-8
  • Diskrete Mathematik. Mit über 500 Übungsaufgaben.
    • Vieweg, Braunschweig/Wiesbaden 1993, ISBN 3-528-07268-7,
    • corrected edition 12006, ISBN 3-8348-0084-8
gollark: If there was wide support for this slight craziness I guess Wolf Mall could get some internal network cables to move items without drones, and I could design inter-shop communication stuff.
gollark: That works too.
gollark: You could actually analyze, roughly, demand for items via krist logs, except KristQL is down.
gollark: Preprogram your shop with the prices and locations of other shops (or I guess have it communicate with others over some defined interface), and when it runs low have it try and buy more stock from elsewhere and send drones to collect.
gollark: Hmm. Drones can fly around other people's claims *and* suck up items...

References

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