John Edensor Littlewood
John Edensor Littlewood (June 9 1885 – September 6 1977) was a British mathematician.
Littlewood was born in Rochester in Kent, and studied at Cambridge University. Most of his work was in the field of mathematical analysis.
He collaborated for many years with G. H. Hardy, and together they devised the first Hardy-Littlewood conjecture, a strong form of the twin prime conjecture, and the second Hardy-Littlewood conjecture.
His collaborative work, carried out by correspondence, covered fields in Diophantine approximation and Waring's problem, in particular. In his other work Littlewood collaborated with Raymond Paley in Fourier theory, and with Offord in combinatorial work on random sums, in developments that opened up fields still intensively studied. Littlewood's inequality on bilinear forms was a forerunner of the later Grothendieck tensor norm theory.
He coined Littlewood's law, which states that individuals can expect miracles to happen to them, at the rate of about one per month.
He continued to write papers into his eighties, in analytical areas in what became the theory of dynamical systems, in particular.
See also: Littlewood's conjecture, Littlewood's three principles of real analysis.
External links
- Biography at the MacTutor archive
Categories: 1885 births | 1977 deaths | 20th century mathematicians | British mathematicians | Number theorists