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Kai Lai Chung

Chung Kai-lai
Chung Kai-Lai.jpg
Born (1917-09-19)September 19, 1917
Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China
Died June 2, 2009(2009-06-02) (aged 91)
Republika ng Pilipinas
Residence China, United States
Citizenship Republic of China, United States
Nationality Republic of China, United States
Institutions Tsinghua University
University of Chicago
Columbia University
University of California, Berkeley
Cornell University
Syracuse University
Stanford University
National University of Singapore
Alma mater Tsinghua University
Princeton University
Doctoral advisor Harald Cramér
John Wilder Tukey
Doctoral students Warren Hirsch
Cyrus Derman
Rafael Van Severen Chacon
Naresh Chandra Jain
Robert Thomas Smythe
J. Michael Steele
Ruth Jeannette Williams
Elton (Pei) Hsu
Known for modern probability theory

Kai Lai Chung (traditional Chinese: 鍾開萊; simplified Chinese: 钟开莱; September 19, 1917 – June 2, 2009) was a Chinese American mathematician known for his significant contributions to modern probability theory.

Chung was a native of Hangzhou, the capital city of Zhejiang Province. Chung entered Tsinghua University in 1936, and initially studied physics at its Department of Physics. In 1940, Chung graduated from the Department of Mathematics of the National Southwestern Associated University, where he later worked as a teaching assistant. During this period, he first studied number theory with Lo-Keng Hua and then probability theory with Pao-Lu Hsu.

In 1944, Chung was chosen to be one of the recipients of the 6th Boxer Rebellion Indemnity Scholarship Program for study in the United States. He arrived at Princeton University on December 1945 and obtained his PhD in 1947. Chung’s dissertation was titled “On the maximum partial sum of sequences of independent random variables” and was under the supervision of John Wilder Tukey and Harald Cramér.

In 1950s, Chung taught at the University of Chicago, Columbia University, UC-Berkeley, Cornell University and Syracuse University. He then transferred to Stanford University in 1961, where he made fundamental contributions to the study of Brownian motion and laid the framework for the general mathematical theory of Markov chains. Chung would later be appointed Professor Emeritus of Mathematics of the Department of Mathematics at Stanford.


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