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James Kister
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* James Kister
James M. Kister
,
an American mathematician,
topologist
, and professor emeritus of mathematics at
University of Michigan
. He received his Ph.D. in 1959 from the
University of Wisconsin–Madison
, under advisor
R. H. Bing
on
isotopies
in
manifolds
[1]
. The
Kister Isotopy
was an important contribution to the theory of
higher dimensional topology
. As a research assistant at
Los Alamos National Laboratory
from 1953-56, James Kister worked with some of the earliest electronic computers on a variety of scientific projects, including, with several others, the design of a program for a computer to play chess,
MANIAC I
[2]
.
Selected Publications
James Kister
,
Paul Stein
,
Stanislaw Ulam
,
William Walden
,
Mark Wells
(
1957
).
Experiments in Chess
.
Journal of the ACM
, Vol. 4, No. 2
James Kister
(
1959
).
Small isotopies in Euclidean spaces and 3-manifolds
.
Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society
, Vol. 65, pp.371-37
James Kister
(
1959
).
Isotopies in Manifolds
. Ph.D. thesis,
University of Wisconsin–Madison
, advisor
R. H. Bing
,
Isotopies in 3-Manifolds as pdf
External Links
James M. Kister | Faculty History Project
,
University of Michigan
Memoir | James M. Kister | Faculty History Project
The Mathematics Genealogy Project - James Kister
References
^
The Mathematics Genealogy Project - James Kister
^
Memoir | James M. Kister | Faculty History Project
What links here?
Page
Date Edited
Chess
Jan 21, 2018
James Kister
Feb 23, 2015
John von Neumann
May 8, 2017
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Sep 16, 2015
MANIAC I
Nov 17, 2016
Mark Wells
Feb 23, 2015
Mathematician
Apr 9, 2018
Paul Stein
Feb 23, 2015
People
Feb 28, 2018
Stanislaw Ulam
Aug 11, 2016
University of Michigan
Jul 19, 2016
William Walden
Jun 3, 2015
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Table of Contents
James M. Kister,
an American mathematician, topologist, and professor emeritus of mathematics at University of Michigan. He received his Ph.D. in 1959 from the University of Wisconsin–Madison, under advisor R. H. Bing on isotopies in manifolds [1]. The Kister Isotopy was an important contribution to the theory of higher dimensional topology. As a research assistant at Los Alamos National Laboratory from 1953-56, James Kister worked with some of the earliest electronic computers on a variety of scientific projects, including, with several others, the design of a program for a computer to play chess, MANIAC I [2].
Selected Publications
External Links
Memoir | James M. Kister | Faculty History Project
References
What links here?
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