Title: Heini Halberstam Papers, 1949 - 2008
ID: 15/14/45
Primary Creator: Heine Halberstam (1926 - 2014)
Extent: 0.6 cubic feet
Arrangement:
Series 1: Correspondence/Drafts/Talks
Consists of professor Heini Halberstams correspondence, drafts, notes, and talks on mathematical theorems and research, departmental notes and memos, lectures and talks including 'Sparse Sieves' and 'From Friction to Smooth Numbers'. This series is arranged alphabetically by title.
Series 2: Kindertransport: Correspondence/Notes/Publications/Lectures
Consists of professor Heini Halberstams correspondence, research, publications and lectures on the topic of the Kindertransport (German for 'children's transport'). Halberstam was sent to the UK via the Kindertransport in 1938. The Kindertransport was a British program prior to World War II that accepted nearly 10,000 mostly Jewish children refugees from Nazi Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Danzig. Also included are Halberstams own experiences with the program including correspondence with survivors and research on the lives of children who had been rescued through the British program. Additionally, there are Halberstams lecture notes and papers on this topic. This series is arranged alphabetically by title.
Series 3: Publications
Consists of publications of professor Heini Halberstam from the 1940s to the 2000s. This series is arranged chronologically.
Date Acquired: 08/10/2021
Subjects: Mathematics
These papers are unprocessed. Please contact the University Archives if you have questions.
Professor Heini Halberstam (1926 - 2014), (professional career: 1962 - 1996) University of Illinois Professor Emeritus of Mathematics (1996), was a celebrated researcher in the field of analytic number theory. The Czech-born British mathematician is best known for his part in the Elliot-Halberstam conjecture. Heine was born in Most, Czechoslovakia, to Rabbi Michael and Judith Halberstamova. As anti-Semitism and the Nazi party spread across Europe, Heini was sent to England aboard the Kindertransport (German for 'children's transport') when he was twelve years old. The Kindertransport was a British program prior to World War II that accepted nearly 10,000 mostly Jewish children refugees from Nazi Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Danzig. In London Heini earned a PhD in Mathematics (1952) from the University of London, and then went onto teach at Trinity College Dublin (1962 - 1964), where he the Erasmus Smith Professor of Mathematics. He also taught at the University of Nottingham (1964 - 1980), where he helped start the Shell Centre for Mathematical Education. He then accepted a position at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (1980 - 1996) and was appointed Professor Emeritus in 1996.
Papers include correspondence, notes, drafts, talks and lectures on mathematical research and theorems including a lecture titled 'Sparse Sieves'. Additionally, there is correspondence, research, publications, and lectures on Halberstams involvement with the Kindertransport. This includes his own experiences as child in the Kindertransport as well as other survivors he met. Halberstams publications range from the 1940s - 2000s. Notably are his publications on analytic number theory. Included in this collection are 'A New Look at Bruns Sieve', which is co-authored with K.E. Richert; 'A Conjecture in Prime Number Theory' co-authored with Peter Elliot; and 'Differential Difference Equation in Analytic Number Theory' co-authored with Harold Diamond. Additionally, Professor Halberstam authored a book review on 'The Indian Clerk', By: David Leavitt.
This collection is organized into 3 series: Series 1, Correspondence/Drafts/Talks (1948 - 2012) arranged alphabetically by title. Series 2, Kindertransport: Correspondence/Notes/Publications/Lectures (1998 - 2002) arranged alphabetically by title. Series 3: Publications (1940s - 2000s) arranged chronologically.
Professor Heini Halberstam (1926 - 2014), (professional career: 1962 - 1996) University of Illinois Professor Emeritus of Mathematics (1996), was a celebrated researcher in the field of analytic number theory. The Czech-born British mathematician is best known for his part in the Elliot-Halberstam conjecture. Heine was born in Most, Czechoslovakia, to Rabbi Michael and Judith Halberstamova. As anti-Semitism and the Nazi party spread across Europe, Heini was sent to England aboard the Kindertransport (German for "children's transport") when he was twelve years old. . The Kindertransport was a British program prior to World War II that accepted nearly 10,000 mostly Jewish children refugees from Nazi Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Danzig. In London Heini earned a PhD in Mathematics (1952) from the University of London, and then went onto teach at Trinity College Dublin (1962 - 1964), where he the Erasmus Smiths Professor of Mathematics. He also taught at the University of Nottingham (1964 - 1980), where he helped start the Shell Centre for Mathematical Education. He then accepted a position at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (1980 - 1996) and was appointed Professor Emeritus in 1996.
Professor Halberstam was an internationally recognized figure in the field of number theory. His research included Warings problem, mean value theorems, probabilistic methods, combinatorial number theory, and small and large sieves. He collaborated with many colleagues in his research including Harold Davenport, Peter Elliot, Klaus Roth, Hans-Egan Richert, and Harold Diamond. He has many publications of note including Sieves, which he co-authored with Klaus Roth, Sequences, and Sieve Theory and A Higher Dimensional Sieve Method.
During his career Professor Halberstam was a member of the London Mathematical Society where he served as the Vice President and as Secretary of the London Mathematical Society Journal. He was also a member of the American Mathematical Society. Additionally, throughout his career he held positions at Brown, Michigan, UC-Berkeley, Syracuse, Ohio State, Paris, Ulm, Scuola Normale Superiore at Pisa, Tel Aviv, York, Hong Kong, and Matscience (India). He authored over 150 journal articles and completed 10 volumes of collected mathematical papers.
Professor Heine Halberstam passed away in 2014 at the age of 87.
URL: https://files.archon.library.illinois.edu/uasfa/0151445.4.pdf
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