Marshall Hall, Jr. | |
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Marshall Hall, Jr.
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Born |
St Louis, Missouri, U.S. |
17 September 1910
Died | 4 July 1990 London, UK |
(aged 79)
Residence | U.S. |
Nationality | American |
Fields | Mathematician |
Institutions |
Yale University Ohio State University California Institute of Technology Emory University |
Alma mater |
Cambridge University Yale University |
Doctoral advisor | Øystein Ore |
Doctoral students |
Robert Calderbank Donald Knuth Robert McEliece E. T. Parker |
Known for | Group theory, Combinatorics |
Marshall Hall, Jr. (17 September 1910 – 4 July 1990) was an American mathematician who made significant contributions to group theory and combinatorics.
He studied mathematics at Yale, graduating in 1932. He studied for a year at Cambridge University under a Henry Fellowship working with G. H. Hardy. He returned to Yale to take his Ph.D. in 1936 under the supervision of Øystein Ore.
He worked in Naval Intelligence during World War II, including six months in 1944 at Bletchley Park, the center of British wartime code breaking. In 1946 he took a position at The Ohio State University. In 1959 he moved to the California Institute of Technology where, in 1973, he was named the first IBM Professor at Caltech, the first named chair in mathematics. After retiring from Caltech in 1981, he accepted a post at Emory University in 1985.
Hall died in 1990 in London on his way to a conference to mark his 80th birthday.
He wrote a number of papers of fundamental importance in group theory, including his solution of Burnside's problem for groups of exponent 6, showing that a finitely generated group in which the order of every element divides 6 must be finite.
His work in combinatorics includes an important paper of 1943 on projective planes, which for many years was one of the most cited mathematics research papers. In this paper he constructed a family of non-Desarguesian projective planes which are known today as Hall planes. He also worked on block designs and coding theory.