Albrecht Fröhlich
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Lua error in Module:Infobox at line 235: malformed pattern (missing ']'). Albrecht Fröhlich FRS[3] (22 May 1916 – 8 November 2001) was a mathematician famous for his major results and conjectures on Galois module theory in the Galois structure of rings of integers.[3]
Education
He was born in Munich to a Jewish family. He fled from the Nazis to France, and then to Palestine. He went to Bristol University in 1945, gaining a Ph.D in 1951 with a dissertation entitled On Some Topics in the Theory of Representation of Groups and Individual Class Field Theory under the supervision of Hans Heilbronn. He was a lecturer at the University of Leicester and then at the Keele University, then in 1962 moved as reader to King's College London where he worked until his retirement in 1981 when he moved to Robinson College, Cambridge.
Awards
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1976.[3] He was awarded the Berwick Prize of the London Mathematical Society in 1976 and its De Morgan Medal in 1992. The Society's Fröhlich Prize is named in his honour.
Personal
He is the brother of Herbert Fröhlich.
References
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External links
- The papers of Albrecht Fröhlich have just been processed by the NCUACS, Bath, England [1]. They can be consulted in the Archives of King's College, London
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- ↑ Albrecht Fröhlich at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
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- Pages with reference errors
- 1916 births
- 2001 deaths
- 20th-century mathematicians
- 20th-century British mathematicians
- British Jews
- German Jews
- Academics of Keele University
- Academics of the University of Leicester
- Academics of King's College London
- Jews who immigrated to the United Kingdom to escape Nazism
- Fellows of the Royal Society
- Fellows of Robinson College, Cambridge
- Alumni of the University of Bristol
- Academics of the University of Bristol
- British mathematician stubs