Jaroslav Kurzweil

Jaroslav Kurzweil (born 1926) (Czech pronunciation: [ˈjaroslaf ˈkurtsvajl]) is a Czech mathematician. He is a specialist in ordinary differential equations and defined the Henstock–Kurzweil integral in terms of Riemann sums, first published in 1957 in the Czechoslovak Mathematical Journal. Kurzweil has been awarded the highest possible scientific prize of the Czech Republic, the "Czech Brain" of the year 2006, as an acknowledgement of his life achievements.[1][2]

With limited opportunities of contact between mathematicians within the Iron Curtain and those from the West, Kurzweil and Ivo Babuska founded a series of international scientific conferences named EQUADIFF, being held every four years since 1962 alternately in Praha, Bratislava, and Brno. He was chief editor of Mathematica Bohemica (then called Casopis pro pestovani matematiky) from 1956 to 1970 and was in its editorial board until 2007. In 2007, Kurzweil delivered a New Year's toast on Czech Television.[3]

See also

References

  1. Mathematician Jaroslav Kurzweil to be awarded "Czech Brain" prize, Archived 2010-07-17 at the Wayback Machine Czech Radio, May 10, 2006. Accessed January 23, 2010
  2. Awards of researchers of the Institute. Archived 2008-02-29 at Archive.today Institute of Mathematics of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic. Accessed January 23, 2010
  3. Ninety years of Jaroslav Kurzweil
  • Kurzweil, Jaroslav (2012). Generalized Ordinary Differential Equations: Not Absolutely Continuous Solutions. Series in Real Analysis. 11. World Scientific Publishing Company. ISBN 978-9814324021.
  • Jiří Jarník; Štefan Schwabik; Milan Tvrdý; Ivo Vrkoč, Sixty years of Jaroslav Kurzweil. Czechoslovak Mathematical Journal, Vol. 36 (1986), No. 1, 147166
  • Kurzweil J.. Generalized ordinary differential equations and continuous dependence on a parameter. Czechoslovak Mathe. Journal, 7 (82) 1957, 418449.


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