Dmitri Egorov
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Dmitri Fyodorovich Egorov (Russian: Дмитрий Фёдорович Егоров), (December 22, 1869, Moscow, Russia – September 10, 1931, Kazan, Soviet Union) was a Russian mathematician. He studied potential surfaces and triply orthogonal systems, and made significant contributions to the broader areas of differential geometry and integral equations. Egorov's work influenced that of Jean Gaston Darboux on differential geometry and mathematical analysis. A theorem in real analysis, Egorov's Theorem, is named in his honor.
Egorov held spiritual beliefs to be of great importance, and openly defended the Church against Marxist supporters after the Russian Revolution. He was elected president of the Moscow Mathematical Society in 1921, and became director of the Institute for Mechanics and Mathematics at Moscow State University in 1923. However because of Egorov's stance against the repression of the Church, he was dismissed from the Institute in 1929 and publicly rebuked. In 1930 he was arrested and imprisoned as a "religious sectarian", and soon after was expelled from the Moscow Mathematical Society. Upon imprisonment, Egorov began a hunger strike until he was taken to the prison hospital, and eventually to the house of fellow mathematician Nikolai Chebotaryov where he died.
Egorov's students included P.S. Alexandrov, Nikolai Luzin and Ivan Petrovsky.
[edit] External links
- Dmitri Egorov at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- O'Connor, John J., and Edmund F. Robertson. "Dmitri Egorov". MacTutor History of Mathematics archive.