peoplepill id: ernst-sejersted-selmer
ESS
Norway
1 views today
1 views this week
Ernst Sejersted Selmer
Norwegian mathematician

Ernst Sejersted Selmer

The basics

Quick Facts

The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Ernst Sejersted Selmer (20 February 1920 – 8 November 2006) was a Norwegian mathematician who worked on number theory. The Selmer group of an Abelian variety is named after him. His main work came within diophantine equations. He worked as a cryptologist during the second world war.

Biography

Selmer was born in Oslo as a son of Ernst W. Selmer. He took the dr.philos. degree in 1952 and was hired as a lecturer at the University of Oslo in the same year.

Selmer received a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship to study in the United States for the years 1951-1952. He arrived in January 1951 as a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J. where the IAS computer was being constructed for John Von Neumann. From Princeton, Selmer traveled to Berkeley where he contributed to Paul Morton's construction of the CALDIC computer. He was hired by Consolidated Engineering Corporation (CEC) as a consultant late in 1951 and designed much of the logic for their Datatron computer, working closely with other CEC employees such as Sibyl M. Rock. He returned to the Institute for Advanced Study again as a visiting scholar in 1952.

On September 25, 1953 Selmer applied for a U.S. Patent for an Electronic Adder. This patent, No. 2,947,479, was awarded on August 2, 1960.

From 1956 to 1987 he was a professor at the University of Bergen. He was a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.

Publications

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Ernst Sejersted Selmer is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Ernst Sejersted Selmer
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes