George Adam Pfeiffer

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George Adam Pfeiffer (16 July 1889, New York City[1] – 28 December 1943) was an American mathematician.

Pfeiffer received in 1910 his master's degree in engineering from Stevens Institute of Technology and then his A.M. in 1911 and in 1914 his Ph.D. in mathematics from Columbia University. He spent the academic year 1914–1915 as a Benjamin Pierce Instructor at Harvard University[2][3] and then in 1915 became an instructor at Princeton University.[4] During WW I he was in the U.S. army and at Princeton University taught meteorology to army aviation students. After the war he taught, starting as an instructor in February 1919,[5] at Columbia University.[6] There he became in 1924 an assistant professor and in 1931 an associate professor, in which position he remained until his death from a heart attack following minor surgery in 1943.[5]

Pfeiffer is known for publishing the first example of a holomorphic function with a non-linearizable irrational indifferent fixed point.[7][8][9] The question of the linearizability of fixed points is of great importance in complex dynamics. After Pfeiffer's example, Hubert Cremer gave various criteria for the non-linearizability of irrational indifferent fixed points, while Carl Ludwig Siegel in 1942 gave conditions which imply the linearizability of such fixed points.[10]

Pfeiffer was on the editorial staff of Annals of Mathematics. He was an Invited Speaker at the ICM in Bologna in 1928 and in 1932 in Zürich.

Sources

Selected publications

  • "On the conformal geometry of analytic arcs." American Journal of Mathematics 37, no. 4 (1915): 395–430. doi:10.2307/2370214
  • "Note on the linear dependence of analytic functions." Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 23, no. 3 (1916): 117–118. MR 1559879
  • "A property of the level lines of a region with a rectifiable boundary." Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 34, no. 5 (1928): 656–664. MR 1561631

References

  1. General Registry of the Members of the Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity 1850–1920. Philadelphia, 1920; p. 448 online
  2. Pfeiffer appointed to Harvard U., Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 1914–1915, vol. 21, p. 368
  3. Pfeiffer's appointment to Princeton U., Bull. of the AMS, 1915–1916 vol. 22, p. 369
  4. The President's report. 1916, Princeton University
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  6. Pfeifer's appointment to Columbia U., Bulletin of the AMS, 1918–1919, vol. 25, p. 284
  7. G. A. Pfeiffer: Existence of divergent solutions of the functional equations \varphi[g(x)]=a\varphi(x),\ f[f(x)]=g(x), where g(x) is a given analytic function, in the irrational case. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 22 (1916), p. 163
  8. G. A. Pfeiffer: On the Conformal Mapping of Curvilinear Angles. The Functional Equation \varphi [ f(x) ] = a_1 \varphi (x). Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 18 (1917), no. 2, pp. 185–198 MR 1501069
  9. G. A. Pfeiffer: The functional equation f[f(x)]=g(x). Annals of Mathematics (2nd series), vol. 20 (1918), pp. 13–22.
  10. A description and discussion of the results of Pfeiffer, Cremer and Siegel are available in the book by Alexander, Iavernaro and Rosa.