Dorothy Maharam

Dorothy Maharam Stone (July 1, 1917[1] – September 27, 2014 [2]) was an American mathematician born in Parkersburg, West Virginia, who made important contributions to measure theory and became the namesake of Maharam's theorem and Maharam algebra.[3]

Life

Maharam earned her B.S. degree at Carnegie Institute of Technology in 1937 and her Ph.D. in 1940 under Anna Johnson Pell Wheeler from Bryn Mawr College with a dissertation entitled On measure in abstract sets.[4] Part of her thesis was published in the Transactions of the AMS. Then she went on to a postdoc at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, where she first met fellow mathematician Arthur Harold Stone. They married in April 1942.

Stone and Maharam both lectured at various universities in the USA and Great Britain and were faculty at the University of Rochester for many years. Their two children, David and Ellen, both became mathematicians as well.

She retired in 2001. Her husband, Arthur Stone, died August 6, 2000, and her son, David Stone, died August 27, 2014.

Contributions

Maharam pioneered the research of finitely additive measures on integers. Maharam's theorem about the decomposability of complete measure spaces plays an important role in the theory of Banach spaces. Maharam published it in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America in 1942. Another paper of Maharam, in 1947 in the Annals of Mathematics, introduced Maharam algebras, complete Boolean algebras with continuous submeasures.

References

  1. Gale, Thomson (2003). American Men & Women of Science: Q-S. p. 1022. ISBN 0787665290.
  2. http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/bostonglobe/obituary.aspx?pid=172613269
  3. Oxtoby, John C. "Biographical note". Measure and Measurable Dynamics, Proceedings of a Conrefence in Honor of Dorothy Maharam Stone held September 17–19, 1987. AMS.
  4. Dorothy Maharam at the Mathematics Genealogy Project


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