Michel Plancherel

Michel Plancherel (16 January 1885, Bussy, Fribourg  4 March 1967, Zurich) was a Swiss mathematician. He was born in Bussy (Fribourg, Switzerland) and obtained his Diplom in mathematics from the University of Fribourg and then his doctoral degree in 1907 with a thesis written under the supervision of Mathias Lerch. Plancherel was a professor in Fribourg (1911), and from 1920 at ETH Zurich.

Left to right, standing: Michel Plancherel, Prof. Karl Goldziher (Budapest), Otto Blumenthal, sitting: Ms. Blumenthal, and an unknown woman, at the International Mathematical Congress, Zürich 1932

He worked in the areas of mathematical analysis, mathematical physics and algebra, and is known for the Plancherel theorem [1] in harmonic analysis. He was an Invited Speaker of the ICM in 1924 at Toronto[2] and in 1928 at Bologna.

He was married to Cécile Tercier, had nine children, and presided at the Mission Catholique Française in Zürich.

See also

References

  1. Plancherel, Michel (1910) "Contribution a l'etude de la representation d'une fonction arbitraire par les integrales définies," Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo, vol. 30, pages 289-335.
  2. Plancherel, Michel (1924) " Sur les séries de fonctions orthogonales." Archived 2017-12-03 at the Wayback Machine In Proceedings of the International Mathematical Congress, Toronto, vol. 1, pp. 619–622.
  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Michel Plancherel", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews.
  • (in French) Short biography, Department of mathematics, University of Fribourg
  • Media related to Michel Plancherel (mathematician) at Wikimedia Commons


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