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E. Landau

Edmund Landau
Edmund Landau.jpg
Born Edmund Georg Hermann Landau
(1877-02-14)14 February 1877
Berlin, Germany
Died 19 February 1938(1938-02-19) (aged 61)
Berlin, Germany
Nationality German
Fields Number theory
Complex analysis
Institutions University of Berlin
University of Göttingen
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Alma mater University of Berlin
Doctoral advisor Georg Frobenius
Lazarus Fuchs
Doctoral students Paul Bernays
Harald Bohr
Gustav Doetsch
Hans Heilbronn
Dunham Jackson
Erich Kamke
Aubrey Kempner
Alexander Ostrowski
Carl Ludwig Siegel
Arnold Walfisz
Vojtěch Jarník
Known for Distribution of prime numbers
Landau prime ideal theorem
Spouse Marianne Ehrlich

Edmund Georg Hermann Landau (14 February 1877 – 19 February 1938) was a German born mathematician who worked in the fields of number theory and complex analysis.

Edmund Landau was born to Jewish family in Berlin. His father was Leopold Landau, a gynecologist and his mother was Johanna Jacoby. Landau studied mathematics at the University of Berlin, receiving his doctorate in 1899 and his habilitation (the post-doctoral qualification required in German universities) in 1901. His doctoral thesis was 14 pages long. He taught at the University of Berlin from 1899 to 1909, after which he held a chair at the University of Göttingen. He married Marianne Ehrlich, the daughter of the Nobel Prize-winning biologist Paul Ehrlich, in 1905.

During the 1920s, Landau was instrumental in establishing the Mathematics Institute at the nascent Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Intent on eventually settling in Jerusalem, he taught himself Hebrew and delivered a lecture entitled Solved and unsolved problems in elementary number theory in Hebrew on April 2, 1925 during the University's groundbreaking ceremonies. He negotiated with the University's president, Judah Magnes, regarding a position at the University and the building that was to house the Mathematics Institute.

Landau and his family emigrated to Palestine in 1927 and he began teaching at the Hebrew University. The family had difficulty adjusting to the primitive living standards then available in Jerusalem. In addition, Landau became a pawn in a struggle for control of the University between Magnes and Chaim Weizmann and Albert Einstein. Magnes suggested that Landau be appointed Rector of the University, but Einstein and Weizmann supported Selig Brodetsky. Landau was disgusted by the dispute and decided to return to Göttingen, remaining there until he was forced out by the Nazi regime after the Machtergreifung in 1933. Thereafter, he lectured only outside Germany. He moved to Berlin in 1934, where he died in early 1938 of natural causes.


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