Nina Bari

Nina Karlovna Bari (Russian Нина Карловна Бари; * 6 Novemberjul / November 19 1901greg in Moscow, .. † July 15, 1961 ibid ) was a Russian mathematician who has been dealing with real analysis.

Bari was the daughter of a doctor and studied from 1918 to 1921 at the Moscow State University with Nikolai Nikolaevich Luzin - be the first female student. They then continued to study at the Institute of Mathematics and Mechanics at Lusin while she taught simultaneously at different institutes in Moscow. In 1926 she received her doctorate with an award winning work ( Glawnauk price) via Fourier series. In 1927 she was in Paris with Jacques Hadamard, then in Lwów ( where she attended the Polish Congress of Mathematicians ), 1928 in Bologna and 1929 again with a Rockefeller Fellowship in Paris. In 1932 she became a professor at Moscow University, where in 1935 the first woman in Russia habilitated (Russian doctorate degrees). The degree was granted to her in recognition of her scientific achievements to date without filing a work. In 1961 she died when she fell under a train of the Moscow Metro. There were rumors of suicide, which was cited as a motive of the death of their teacher Lusin Eleven years earlier,.

Bari was one of the best students of Lusin and also published his collected works. It dealt specifically with Fourier series. A monograph on this subject was published after her death. She also wrote textbooks on higher algebra (1932) and rows (1936) and translated the book by Henri Lebesgue integration over.

She was married to the mathematician Victor Nemyzki, with whom she also shared the hobby of mountain climbing ( in the Caucasus, Pamir mountains, Altai, Tian -Shan, etc.).

Writings

  • A treatise on trigonometric series. 2 volumes, New York 1964.
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