Poul Heegaard

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Poul Heegaard
44154 Poul Heegaard.jpg
Poul Heegaard, ca. 1940
Born(1871-11-02)2 November 1871
Died7 February 1948(1948-02-07) (aged 76)
NationalityDenmark
Alma materUniversity of Copenhagen
Scientific career
FieldsTopology
InstitutionsUniversity of Copenhagen, University of Oslo
ThesisForstudier til en topologisk Teori for de algebraiske Fladers Sammenhæng (1898)

Poul Heegaard (Danish: [ˈhe̝ˀˌkɒˀ] (About this soundlisten); November 2, 1871, Copenhagen - February 7, 1948, Oslo) was a Danish mathematician active in the field of topology. His 1898 thesis introduced a concept now called the Heegaard splitting of a 3-manifold. Heegaard's ideas allowed him to make a careful critique of work of Henri Poincaré. Poincaré had overlooked the possibility of the appearance of torsion in the homology groups of a space.

He later co-authored, with Max Dehn, a foundational article on combinatorial topology, in the form of an encyclopedia entry.[1]

Heegaard studied mathematics at the University of Copenhagen, from 1889 to 1893 and following years of travelling, and teaching mathematics, he was appointed professor at University of Copenhagen in 1910. An English translation of his 1898 thesis, which laid a rigorous topological foundation for modern knot theory, may be found at www.maths.ed.ac.uk/~v1ranick/papers/heegaardenglish.pdf. The section on "a visually transparent representation of the complex points of an algebraic surface" is especially important.


Following a dispute with the faculty over, among other things, the hiring of Harald Bohr as professor at the University (which Heegaard opposed);[2] Heegaard accepted a professorship at Oslo in Norway, where he worked till his retirement in 1941.

Notes[]

  1. ^ Dehn, Max; Heegaard, Poul (1907). "Analysis situs". Enzyklop. d. math. Wissensch. III. pp. 153–220. JFM 38.0510.14.
  2. ^ Munkholm, Ellen S.; Munkholm, Hans J. (1999), "Poul Heegaard", History of topology, North-Holland, Amsterdam, pp. 925–946, doi:10.1016/B978-044482375-5/50035-3, MR 1721129; see in particular pp. 937–938.

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