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Cornelius Lanczos

 
Wikipedia: Cornelius Lanczos
Cornelius Lanczos
Born February 2, 1893(1893-02-02)
Székesfehérvár
Died June 25, 1974 (aged 81)
Budapest
Nationality Hungarian
Fields Mathematics
Theoretical physics
Alma mater University of Szeged
Doctoral advisor Rudolf Ortvay
Other academic advisors Lorand Eötvös, Leopold Fejér, Franz Himstedt, Erwin Madelung

Cornelius Lanczos (Hungarian: Lánczos Kornél, Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈlaːntsoʃ]), born (til 1906) Löwy (Lőwy) Kornél (February 2, 1893 – June 25, 1974) was a Hungarian mathematician and physicist.

He was born at Székesfehérvár, as a son of Karl Löwy (Lőwy Károly) and Adél Hahn.

Lanczos' Ph.D. thesis (1921) was on relativity theory. In 1924 he discovered an exact solution of the Einstein field equation which represents a cylindrically symmetric rigidly rotating configuration of dust particles. This was later rediscovered by Willem Jacob van Stockum and is known today as the van Stockum dust. It is one of the simplest known exact solutions in general relativity and regarded as an important example, in part because it exhibits closed timelike curves. Lanczos served as assistant to Albert Einstein during the period 1928–29.

He did pioneering work along with G.C. Danielson on what is now called the fast Fourier transform (1940), but the significance of his discovery was not appreciated at the time and today the FFT is credited to Cooley and Tukey (1965). (As a matter of fact, similar claims can be made for several other mathematicians; some[who?] even name Carl Friedrich Gauss as a progenitor of the FFT.)

Working in Los Angeles at the U.S. National Bureau of Standards after 1949 Lanczos developed a number of techniques for mathematical calculations using digital computers, including:

In 1962, Lanczos showed that the Weyl tensor, which plays a fundamental role in general relativity, can be obtained from a tensor potential which is now called the Lanczos potential.

Lanczos resampling is based on a windowed sinc function as a practical upsampling filter approximating the ideal sinc function. Lanczos resampling is widely used in video up-sampling for digital zoom applications.

Lanczos was an outstanding physics teacher. Books such as The Variational Principles of Mechanics (1949) show his explanatory ability and enthusiasm for the subject.

During the McCarthy era Lanczos came under suspicion for possible Communist links. In 1952 he chose to leave the U.S. and move to the School of Theoretical Physics at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies in Ireland where he succeeded Schrödinger. When at D.I.A.S. he wrote the classic book, "Applied Analysis" (1956).

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