Mojżesz David Kirszbraun
Mojżesz David Kirszbraun (1903–1942)[1] was a Polish mathematician, mostly known for the Kirszbraun theorem on extensions of Lipschitz maps. This theorem appears in his master's thesis, defended in Warsaw in 1930.
Kirszbraun finished school in 1922. Together with his classmate Adolf Lindenbaum, he continued his studies in Warsaw University. Later, he worked as an actuary in an insurance company. He died in a ghetto in 1942.
Publications
- Kirzbraun, M.D. (1934). "Ueber die zusammenziehende und Lipschitzsche Transformationen". Fund. Math. 22: 77–108.
gollark: GREENEN!
gollark: Greenen yourself, foul brimstone!
gollark: ARing.
gollark: Er, seems that I only have five magis, how many experiments are left?
gollark: Done.
References
- An entry about Kirszbraun written by Edward Marczewski, Polski słownik biograficzny, Tom XII, p. 486
- Mojżesz Kirszbraun, Holocaust Survivors and Victims Database.
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