Evan Tom Davies

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Evan Tom Davies
Born(1904-09-24)24 September 1904
Died8 October 1973(1973-10-08) (aged 69)
Known forStudying applications of the Lie derivative and manifolds
Spouse(s)Margaret Helen Picton, Hilda Gladys Boyens
ChildrenGeraint Davies
Scientific career
Doctoral advisorTullio Levi-Civita
InfluencesPaul Dienes

Evan Tom Davies (24 September 1904 – 8 October 1973) was a Welsh mathematician. He studied applications of the Lie derivative as it relates to Riemannian geometry as well as absolute differential calculus, and published a large number of papers relating to the subjects.

Early life[]

Davies was born in 1904 in Pencader, Carmarthenshire, a small village in Wales. He was the son of two farmers and attended a local primary school. After finishing primary school, Davies received a full ride scholarship to in the neighbouring town of Llandysul. There he became friends with Evan James Williams, a future professor of physics at Aberystwyth University and member of the Royal Society. In 1921, he enrolled in Aberystwyth University. He would graduate with a Bachelor of Science with honours in the field of applied mathematics. After graduation he went to Swansea University where he studied pure mathematics and received his master's degree. Davies would move to Rome in August 1926 to study with the leading expert on absolute differential calculus, Tullio Levi-Civita. There he received his doctorate.[1]

Career[]

In 1930, after a short academic break due to poor health, Davies accepted a position as an assistant lecturer at King's College London. There he was promoted twice, first to Lecturer in 1935, and later to Reader in 1946. Davies was affected by the evacuation of King's College due to the London Blitz and was forced to temporarily relocate to the University of Bristol. After the conclusion of the Second World War and his subsequent promotion to Lecturer; Davie would become the chair of mathematics at the University of Southampton. He stayed at Southampton until his retirement in 1969 at the age of 65. After retirement, he went on to be a professor of mathematics at the University of Calgary for a period two years until leaving to be a professor at the University of Waterloo. He died at the age of 69 while employed there.[1][2]

Publications[]

  • On the infinitesimal deformations of a space (1933)
  • On the deformation of a subspace (1936)
  • On the infinitesimal deformations of tensor submanifolds (1937)
  • On the second and third fundamental forms of a subspace (1937)
  • Analogues of the Frenet formulae determined by deformation operators (1938)
  • Lie derivation in generalized metric spaces (1939)
  • Subspaces of a Finsler space (1945)
  • Motions in a metric space based on the notion of area (1945)
  • The theory of surfaces in a geometry based on the notion of area (1947)
  • On the invariant theory of contact transformations (1953)
  • Parallel distributions and contact transformations (1966)

Personal life[]

Davies' first marriage was to Margaret Helen Picton in 1941, but she died a few years later in 1944. In 1955 he remarried, to Hilda Gladys Boyens, and they had one son. He made a hobby of linguistics and was fluent in five languages.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Evan Tom Davies". www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk. School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
  2. ^ Rund, Hanno; Forbes, Williams F. (1976). Topics in Differential Geometry. New York, New York: Academic Press. ISBN 9781483272696. Retrieved 28 June 2015.

External links[]

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