J. K. Hale | |
---|---|
Born | Jack Kenneth Hale October 3, 1928 Carbon Glow, Kentucky, U.S. |
Died | December 9, 2009 Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. |
(aged 81)
Nationality | United States |
Fields | Applied mathematics and Dynamical systems and Control theory |
Institutions | Brown University |
Alma mater | Purdue University |
Doctoral advisor | Lamberto Cesari |
Notable awards |
Chauvenet Prize (1965) Guggenheim fellowship (1979) |
Jack Kenneth Hale (born 3 October 1928 in Carbon Glow, Kentucky; died 9 December 2009 in Atlanta, Georgia) was an American mathematician working primarily in the field of dynamical systems and functional differential equations.
Jack Hale defended his Ph.D. thesis "On the Asymptotic Behavior of the Solutions of Systems of Differential Equations" at Purdue University under Lamberto Cesari in 1954; his undergraduate years were spent at Berea College, where he was studying Mathematics until 1949.
In 1954–57, Hale worked as a Systems Analyst at Sandia Corporation and in 1957–58 he was a Staff Scientist at Remington Rand Univac. During 1958–64, he was a permanent member of the Research Institute for Advanced Studies (RIAS) in Baltimore, Maryland. He became a faculty member at Brown University in 1964 and worked in the Division of Applied Mathematics for 24 years until 1988, serving as Director of the Lefschetz Center for Dynamical Systems for a number of years. In 1988 Hale moved to the School of Mathematics at the Georgia Institute of Technology where he co-founded the Center for Dynamical Systems and Nonlinear Studies (CDSNS), serving as the Director of the CDSNS from 1989 to 1998.
In 1964, together with Joseph LaSalle, Hale became the founding editor of the Journal of Differential Equations, of which he was later Chief Editor. The following year he shared the 1965 Chauvenet Prize with LaSalle for their exposition in the piece on Differential Equations: Linearity vs. Nonlinearity published in the SIAM Review.