Jacques Dixmier

Jacques Dixmier
Born 1924 (age 9192)
Saint-Étienne
Nationality French
Fields Mathematics
Institutions University of Paris
Alma mater University of Paris
Thesis Étude sur les variétés et les opérateurs de Julia avec quelques applications
Doctoral advisor Gaston Julia
Doctoral students Alain Connes
Michel Duflo
Pierre Eymard
Michèle Vergne
Nicole Berline
Known for Dixmier conjecture
Dixmier trace
Notable awards Prix Ampère (1976)
Leroy P. Steele Prize (1992)
Émile-Picard-Medaille (2001)

Jacques Dixmier (born 1924) is a French mathematician. He worked on operator algebras, especially C*-algebras, and wrote several of the standard reference books on them, and introduced the Dixmier trace and the Dixmier mapping. He received his Ph.D. in 1949 from the University of Paris, and his students include Alain Connes.[1]

In 1949 upon the initiative of Jean-Pierre Serre and Pierre Samuel, Dixmier became a member of Bourbaki, in which he made essential contributions to the Bourbaki volume on Lie algebras.[2] After retiring as professor emeritus from the University of Paris VI, he spent five years at the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques.

Often there is made the erroneous claim that Dixmier originated the name von Neumann algebra for the operator algebras introduced by John von Neumann, but Dixmier said in an interview that the name originated from a proposal by Jean Dieudonné.[3]

Dixmier was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1966 at Moscow with talk Espace dual d'une algèbre, ou d'un groupe localement compact and again in 1978 at Helsinki with talk Algèbres enveloppantes.

Publications

A translation of Les C*-algèbres et leurs représentations, Gauthier-Villars, 1969.
A translation of Algèbres enveloppantes, Cahiers Scientifiques, Fasc. XXXVII. Gauthier-Villars Éditeur, Paris-Brussels-Montreal, Que., 1974. ii+349 pp.
A translation of Les algèbres d'opérateurs dans l'espace hilbertien: algèbres de von Neumann, Gauthier-Villars (1957), the first book about von Neumann algebras.

Notes

  1. Jacques Dixmier at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. "Interview with Jacques Dixmier". Newsletter of the EMS. June 2009. p. 38.
  3. "Interview with Jacques Dixmier". Newsletter of the EMS. June 2009. p. 38.


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