Jacques Deruyts

Joseph Gustave Jacques Deruyts (18 March 1862, Liège – 5 July 1945, Liège)[1] was a Belgian mathematician, known as a pioneer of group representation theory.

He received his doctorate in 1883 from the University of Liège and was appointed there as assistant to Louis Pérard in experimental physics. Deruyts joined the academic staff in mathematics and was appointed in 1883 a professor of geometry at the University of Liège, where he remained until retirement as professor emeritus. He published in 1892 a treatise Essai d'une théorie générale des formes algébriques which was pioneering research in the representation theory of linear groups and algebraic groups.[2] He was an Invited Speaker of the ICM with talk "Sur la théorie algébrique des forms a séries de n variables" in 1920 at Strasbourg.[3]

References

  1. Deruyts, Joseph Gustave Jacques, bestor.be
  2. Curtis, Charles W. (1999). Pioneers of Representation Theory: Frobenius, Burnside, Schur, and Brauer. American Mathematical Soc. pp. 177–178. ISBN 0-8218-9002-6.
  3. Deruyts, J. (1921). "Sur la théorie algébrique des forms a séries de n variables" (PDF). In: Compte rendu du Congrès international des mathématiciens tenu à Strasbourg du 22 au 30 Septembre 1920. p. 258.
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