Michio Suzuki | |
---|---|
Born |
Chiba, Japan |
October 2, 1926
Died | May 31, 1998 Mitaka, Japan |
(aged 71)
Nationality | Japan |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
Alma mater | University of Tokyo |
Doctoral advisor | Shokichi Iyanaga |
Doctoral students |
Steven Bauman Randall Holmes Ernest Shult Anne Street Tuval Foguel |
Known for | Suzuki groups |
Michio Suzuki (鈴木 通夫? Suzuki Michio, October 2, 1926 – May 31, 1998) was a Japanese mathematician who studied group theory.
He was a Professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign from 1953 to his death. He also had visiting positions at the University of Chicago (1960–61), the Institute for Advanced Study (1962–63, 1968–69, spring 1981), the University of Tokyo (spring 1971), and the University of Padua (1994). Suzuki received his Ph.D in 1952 from the University of Tokyo, despite having moved to the United States the previous year. He was the first to attack the Burnside conjecture, that every finite non-abelian simple group has even order.
A notable achievement was his discovery in 1960 of the Suzuki groups, an infinite family of the only non-abelian simple groups whose order is not divisible by 3. The smallest, of order 29120, was the first simple group of order less than 1 million to be discovered since Dickson's list of 1900.
He classified several classes of simple groups of small rank, including the CIT-groups and C-groups and CA-groups.
There is also a sporadic simple group called the Suzuki group, which he announced in 1968. The Tits ovoid is also referred to as the Suzuki ovoid.