Richard Bellman
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Richard Ernest Bellman (1920–1984) was an applied mathematician, celebrated for his invention of dynamic programming in 1953, and important contributions in other fields of mathematics.
Bellman studied mathematics at Brooklyn College (B.A. 1941) and the University of Wisconsin (M.A.). He then went to work for a Theoretical Physics Division group in Los Alamos. In 1946 he received his Ph.D. at Princeton. He was a professor at the University of Southern California, a Fellow in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1975), and a member of the National Academy of Engineering (1977). He was awarded the IEEE Medal of Honor in 1979, "For contributions to decision processes and control system theory, particularly the creation and application of dynamic programming. His key work is the Bellman-Equation."
His first Ph.D. student was Austin Esogbue, who is currently a professor in Georgia Institute of Technology in the department of Industrial and Systems Engineering.
[edit] See also
- Bellman equation
- Bellman-Ford algorithm
- Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equation
- "Curse of dimensionality", a term coined by Bellman
[edit] References
- Bellman, Richard, Eye of the Hurricane, an Autobiography, World Scientific Publishing, 1984.
- IEEE History Center - Legacies
- Int. Trans. in Op. Res. article on Bellman
- Harold J. Kushner's speech when accepting the Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award
- S. Dreyfus, Richard Bellman on the Birth of Dynamic Programming
- Sanabria, Salvador. [1] Richard Bellman's Biography.
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Categories: American mathematician stubs | 1920 births | 1984 deaths | 20th century mathematicians | American mathematicians | Jewish mathematicians | John von Neumann Theory Prize winners | Erdős number 2 | IEEE Medal of Honor recipients | University of Wisconsin-Madison alumni | Princeton University alumni | University of Southern California faculty | City University of New York people