Tibor Gallai

Hungarian mathematician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroHungarian mathematician
PlacesHungary
wasMathematician Educator
Work fieldAcademia Mathematics
Gender
Male
Birth15 July 1912, Budapest, Central Hungary, Hungary
Death2 January 1992Budapest, Central Hungary, Hungary (aged 79 years)
The details

Biography

Tibor Gallai (born Tibor Grünwald, 15 July 1912 – 2 January 1992) was a Hungarian mathematician. He worked in combinatorics, especially in graph theory, and was a lifelong friend and collaborator of Paul Erdős. He was a student of Dénes Kőnig and an advisor of László Lovász. He was a corresponding member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1991).

His main results

The Edmonds–Gallai decomposition theorem, which was proved independently by Gallai and Jack Edmonds, describes finite graphs from the point of view of matchings. Gallai also proved, with Milgram, Dilworth's theorem in 1947, but as they hesitated to publish the result, Dilworth independently discovered and published it.

Gallai was the first to prove the higher-dimensional version of van der Waerden's theorem.

With Paul Erdős he gave a necessary and sufficient condition for a sequence to be the degree sequence of a graph, known as the Erdős–Gallai theorem.

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