R. Leonard Brooks
R. Leonard Brooks |
---|
Rowland Leonard Brooks (February 6, 1916 – June 18, 1993)[1] was an English mathematician, known for proving Brooks's theorem on the relation between the chromatic number and the degree of graphs. He was born in Lincolnshire, England, studied at Trinity College, Cambridge University, and also worked with fellow Trinity students W. T. Tutte, Cedric Smith, and Arthur Harold Stone on the problem of "Squaring the square" (partitioning rectangles and squares into unequal squares), both under their own names and under the pseudonym Blanche Descartes.[2]
After leaving Cambridge, he worked as a tax inspector.[1]
References[]
- ^ a b Brooks, Smith, Stone, Tutte, squaring.net, retrieved 2010-07-30.
- ^ Soifer, Alexander (2008), The Mathematical Coloring Book, Springer-Verlag, pp. 82–83, ISBN 978-0-387-74640-1.
Categories:
- 1916 births
- 1993 deaths
- Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
- Graph theorists
- 20th-century English mathematicians
- British mathematician stubs