Peter Ludwig Mejdell Sylow

This article is about the Norwegian mathematician. For his theorems in finite group theory, see Sylow theorems.
Ludwig Sylow.

Peter Ludwig Mejdell Sylow (IPA: [ ˈsyːlɔv]) (12 December 1832 7 September 1918) was a Norwegian mathematician who proved foundational results in group theory. He was born and died in Christiania (now Oslo).

Sylow was a high school teacher in Halden, Norway, from 1858 to 1898, and a substitute lecturer at Christiania University in 1862, covering Galois theory. It was then that he posed the question that led to his theorems regarding Sylow subgroups. Sylow published the Sylow theorems in 1872, and subsequently devoted eight years of his life, with Sophus Lie, to the project of editing the mathematical works of his countryman, Niels Henrik Abel.

He was appointed professor of Christiania University in 1898.

Sylow was a son of government minister Thomas Edvard von Westen Sylow, and a brother of military officer and sports official Carl Sylow.[1]

References

  1. Brinchmann, Chr; Daae, Anders; Hammer, K.V., eds. (1912). "Sylow, Peter Ludwig Mejdell". Hvem er Hvem? Haandbog over samtidige norske mænd og kvinder (in Norwegian) (1 ed.). Kristiania: Aschehoug. Retrieved 8 October 2016.

External links


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