Lars Valter Hörmander


Quick Info

Born
24 January 1931
Mjällby, Blekinge, Sweden
Died
25 November 2012
Lund, Sweden

Summary
Lars Hörmander was a Swedish mathematician who won a Fields medal and a Wolf prize for his work on partial differential equations.

Biography

Lars Hörmander's father Armand Per Hilding Jönsson (1893-1981) was a school teacher in the small fishing village on the south coast of Sweden where Lars was born. Armand Jönsson had been born in Smedstorp, Kristianstad to parents Ola Jönsson and Hanna Nordqvist. Lars' mother was Alma Elisabeth Kristiansson (1899-1983) who was born in Mjällby. Lars was the youngest of his parents five children; his siblings included Oskar, born 1921, Olof, born 1923, and Karin. Lars mother Alma was [4]:-
... a bright farmer's daughter who recalled her few years in school as a highlight of her life. Together [Lars's parents] created an atmosphere characterized by a strong thirst for knowledge and education, and all five children graduated quickly from secondary school and then continued with higher education.
Lars attended his first school in Mjällby, then made a daily train journey to attend a higher level school in a larger nearby town. For the next stage in his schooling he had to move to Lund where, from 1946, he attended the gymnasium which, at that time, was called the Lund Private Elementary School but since 1986 has been called Spyken. There he was able to devote much time to studying university level mathematics, encouraged by a teacher, Nils Erik Fremberg (1908-1952), who was also a docent at Lund University and had been a research student of Marcel Riesz. Fremberg taught Hörmander the material covered in the first semester of Lund University while he was at the gymnasium in Lund.

In 1948 Hörmander graduated from the gymnasium and began his studies at the University of Lund. His original intention had been to study engineering, following in the footsteps of his oldest brother Oskar, but Fremberg had persuaded him that mathematics was the topic he should study. At university he was taught by Marcel Riesz who lectured to him on classical function theory and harmonic analysis. Hörmander was awarded a bachelor's degree in the autumn of 1949 and a master's degree in the spring of 1950. He began to undertake research supervised by Marcel Riesz and was awarded his licentiate degree in October 1951 with a thesis Applications of Helly's theorem to estimates of Chebyshev type. Two months later, at the Christmas party, Hörmander met Viveka Sonesson who, two years later would become his wife.

After Marcel Riesz retired in 1952 and went to the United States, Hörmander began working on the theory of partial differential equations. He had been well prepared to study this topic from Riesz's excellent lectures and he was also supported by the two new professors, Lars Gårding and Åke Pleijel who were both working on that topic. He delivered an impressive lecture in the summer of 1953 at the Scandinavian Congress of Mathematicians, which on this occasion was held in Lund.

Before completing his doctorate, Hörmander spent the year 1953-54 doing military service but, since he was mainly undertaking defence research in Stockholm, he was able to continue reading mathematics during this time. Hörmander had married Viveka while he was on military service and their first child, a daughter Gisela, was born in October 1954. When he returned to Lund in the autumn of 1954 he lectured in Lars Gårding's seminar which was held once a week. Hörmander was to give two lectures on Bourbaki style general topology and one of the postgraduate students at Lund, Vidar Thomée, attended his first lecture. Thomée explains in [26] that after Hörmander's first lecture he had understood very little of it and this got back to Gårding. The problem was solved by Gårding who told Thomée that he would deliver the second lecture and Hörmander would teach him the necessary mathematics. Thomée writes in [26]:-
Of course it was hard work for both of us, but the programme was implemented, and I think I learned something significant from the experience.
Viveka and Lars Hörmander's second daughter was Sofia (who was born in 1965) and she writes in [4] about her father working on his doctoral thesis:-
Since my mother had only been able to stay at home to take care of Gisela for the first few months, much of the dissertation was actually written with my sister in his (pulled-out) desk drawer (which was just the right size for the carriage insert). He apparently didn't find this distracting, which was typical of my father - the only effect an interruption seemed to have on his work was the few minutes lost to the actual distraction, nothing more.
Hörmander's doctorate was completed in 1955 when he was examined on this thesis On the theory of general partial differential operators on 22 October of that year. His formal thesis advisor had been Gårding but in reality Hörmander had worked independently, finding his own problems and solving them. The thesis was published in Acta Mathematica in 1955. Hörmander writes [15]:-
It was to a large extent inspired by the thesis of Bernard Malgrange which was announced in 1954, combined with techniques developed for hyperbolic differential operators by Jean Leray and Lars Gårding.
The chair of the examining panel was Gårding and the three student opponents were Jacques-Louis Lions, Bent Fuglede and Nils Aslund. Jacques-Louis Lions asked questions in French, Bent Fuglede spoke in Danish and Nils Aslund asked his first question in Hungarian! Hörmander was awarded a "distinction" for both the thesis and for his defence. On 4 November, Hörmander gave a lecture to prove his abilities for a lectureship. He lectured on "The Fourier transform" and was examined by Erik Larsson, a chemist who was assistant dean, and by Åke Pleijel.

After the award of his doctorate, he applied for a professorship at the University of Stockholm. Before a decision was made on the professorship Hörmander left for a visit to the United States where he spent time at the universities of Chicago, Kansas and Minnesota. He also visited the Institute for Mathematical Sciences (now the Courant Institute) which was directed at that time by Richard Courant. Back in Sweden he took up the appointment of professor at Stockholm on 1 January 1957 which had been offered to him while he was in the United States. He was only 25 years of age when he took up the position but was 26 by the time he was officially installed. The University of Stockholm's student newspaper, Gaudeamus, published an article headed "26-year-old mathematics professor solemnly installed". The text beneath a photograph of Lars and Viveka Hörmander reads: "Sweden's youngest professor, mathematics genius Lars Hörmander, smiles indulgently to his sweet wife during the solemn installation ceremony in the Blue Hall."

He continued to spend time in the United States, particularly at Stanford University and the Institute for Advanced Study [18]:-
Hörmander spent the summers 1960-61 at Stanford University as an invited professor, and took advantage of this time to honour the offer of the 'Springer Grundlehren series' of publishing a book about partial differential equations.
In Stockholm he had to set up a research group in partial differential equations. In [4] Jan Boman explains the situation:-
Since there was no activity in partial differential equations at Stockholm University at this time, he had to start from the beginning and lecture on distribution theory, Fourier analysis, and functional analysis. In 1961-62 he lectured on the material that was to become his 1963 book, 'Linear Partial Differential Operators'. He quickly gathered a large group of students around him. Among them were Christer Kiselman and Vidar Thomée. One of us (Jan Boman) had the privilege to be a member of that group. Lars's lectures were wonderful, and there was excitement and enthusiasm around him. His vast knowledge, fast thinking, and overwhelming capacity for work inspired all of us, but also sometimes scared his students. The clattering from his typewriter, which was constantly heard through his door, is famous.
He lectured, supervised research students, wrote papers and worked on the book Linear Partial Differential Operators which was published in 1963 [18]:-
That book was a milestone in the study of PDE, and a large mathematical public discovered L Hörmander's exposition of recent progress in the area. In the first place, the role of Distribution Theory was emphasized as the perfect tool for linear PDE. Although the notion of weak solution for a PDE was already known to Sergei Sobolev and to the Russian school in the thirties, it is indeed Laurent Schwartz's definition of distributions which created the best perspective, combining abstract aspects of functional analysis with Fourier analysis. Lars Hörmander had been familiar for quite a long time with Schwartz theory, but he had noticed that many mathematicians, including his mentor Marcel Riesz, were rather negative (to say the least) about it. ... During his thesis work, Lars Hörmander managed to avoid explicit reference to Schwartz theory, but in 1963, it was a different story and he chose to present Schwartz Distribution Theory as the basic functional analytic framework of his book.
For extracts of reviews of Linear Partial Differential Operators see THIS LINK.

One of his Ph.D. students at this time was Christer Kiselman who writes in [17]:-
Every Monday to Friday at 15:00 tea and buns were served. It was usually the Registry clerk Anita Ahlbert, called by some the wife of Ahlbert, and by others Anita, who arranged it. A bell tolled and called everyone to the meeting. Such meetings were very important to create a working community when the institution was not too large. Lars was always present if he was not abroad. The discussions often touched on mathematics. Lars was always available for consultations. Students knocked on his door; he could answer everything at once. I never had trouble discussing mathematics with him. He was usually sitting and writing articles, or writing his book, the one that was published in 1963. There was the clatter of his typewriter. He would also write lecture notes and handouts. ... When I left his room, he resumed the clatter of his typewriter after zero seconds. (Personally, I would have needed at least a few seconds to find the place where I could continue.)
In August 1962 the International Congress of Mathematicians was held in Stockholm and Hörmander, as well as being heavily involved in the organisation, received a Fields Medal for his work on partial differential equations. Lars Gårding, describing Hörmander's contributions that earned him the Fields Medal, writes in [9] of early contributions by Jacques Hadamard to linear differential operators which led to the first complete results by Ivan Georgievich Petrovsky. He continues:-
... in a lecture in 1945 [Petrovsky] explicitly asked for a general theory of linear differential operators including those which do not appear in the mathematical models of physics. ... In his book on distributions Laurent Schwartz ... stated a number of problems about differential operators. Since then a rather comprehensive theory has been worked out. Many people have contributed but the deepest and most significant results are due to Hörmander.
You can see some comments by Hormander on the work for which he was awarded the medal at THIS LINK.

Nicolas Lerner writes in [18] about the work which led to the award of the Fields Medal:-
His impressive work on Partial Differential Equations, in particular his characterization of hypoellipticity for constant coefficients and his geometrical explanation of the Lewy non-solvability phenomenon were certainly very strong arguments for awarding him the Medal. Also his new point of view on Partial Differential Equations, which combined functional analysis with 'a priori' inequalities, had led to very general results on large classes of equations, which had been out of reach in the early fifties.
In 1963 Hörmander made an arrangement which allowed him to spend the academic teaching year in Stockholm while he spent spring and summer at the University of Stanford in the United States. However, he writes in [15]:-
I had barely arrived at Stanford when I received an offer to come to the Institute for Advanced Study as a permanent member and professor. Although I had previously been determined not to leave Sweden, the opportunity to do research full time in a mathematically very active environment was hard to resist.
Hörmander spent from 1964 to 1968 at Princeton but felt the pressure of a full time research position so returned to Sweden to take up the chair of mathematics at the University of Lund in 1968. However he returned for frequent visits to the United States, in particular to the Institute for Advanced Study and to Stanford. Michael Atiyah writes in [4]:-
I think the transition from Princeton to Lund was not easy for Lars. He was at home in the Swedish countryside and culture, but mathematically he was somewhat isolated, despite his fame and his international connections.
In [16] Hörmander describes the direction of his research after the award of the Fields Medal. In particular he describes how the main areas developed which are covered by his four volume text The analysis of linear partial differential operators the volumes of which appeared between 1983 and 1985. This work updates his original book Linear Partial Differential Operators (1963) which contained the results which led to the award of his Fields Medal. The American Mathematical Society awarded Hörmander its Leroy P Steele Prize in 2006:-
... for his book "The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators".
The citation reads:-
In the history of mathematics, one is hard-pressed to find any comparable 'expository' work that covers so much material, and with such depth and understanding of such a broad area of mathematics.
Tragedy struck the family in 1978 when Hörmander's eldest daughter Gisela took her own life. She was twenty-three years of age.

Hörmander describes in [15] the later stages of his career:-
After five years devoted to writing a four volume monograph on linear partial differential operators, I spent the academic years 1984-86 as director of the Mittag-Leffler Institute in Stockholm. I had only accepted a two year appointment with leave of absence from Lund since I suspected that the many administrative duties there would not agree very well with me. The hunch was right, and since 1986 I have been in Lund where I became professor emeritus in January 1996.
Hörmander's text, An Introduction to Complex Analysis in Several Variables, has become a classic dealing with the theory of functions of several complex variables. It developed from lecture notes of a course which he gave in Stanford in 1964 and published in book form two years later. Extra material was added to later expanded editions of the work which appeared in 1973 and in 1990. In 1994 he published the book Notions of Convexity. You can read extracts from reviews of these books at THIS LINK.

In [3] Jan Boman spoke about Hörmander's approach to mathematics:-
I learned a lot about Lars' approach to correctness in mathematics. First, that he had an unusual ability to avoid making mistakes, both large and small. Second, he was extremely critical of mathematics that was not entirely accurate.
As noted above, on 1 January 1996 Hörmander retired and was made professor emeritus by the University of Lund.

We should say a little about Hörmander's personality. His daughter Sofia, writing in [4], paints an excellent picture of family life in the Hörmander household:-
I adored my father as a child, and we spent countless hours together building with Legos, doing jigsaw puzzles, playing backgammon and Scrabble (for the latter my mother would also join), or doing carpentry. My father loved to work with his hands, especially with wood, having contemplated a future as a carpenter as a child. Among other things he built a Barbie dollhouse for me with four rooms, each fitted with electricity and completely furnished - my sister also helping with some of the smaller details, like textiles or earthenware. And I loved the weeks before Christmas when he would spend long hours in the basement crafting presents for me - it was frustrating that I couldn't join, but at the same time exciting. One year I was deeply intrigued by screeching sounds coming from the basement. It turned out that he had built the kitchen for the doll house, complete with refrigerator, stove, sink, cupboards, drawers, even a broom closet, and that the strange sounds came from sanding down four coins to make them into stove plates. I was very fortunate that my father always had a lot of spare time, so much so that my mother used to complain that she couldn't keep up with him, and this was even more so in the summers when he would take long periods away from work. On the island of Askerön off the west coast of Sweden my parents had bought a summer house by the sea, and there we spent much time outdoors together. Either in the forest - a highlight was an osprey nest that we would visit every day for years - or on the sea - my father loved sailing. When I was very young we had a SeaCat, which, to my great chagrin, was later traded in for a much smaller boat for day trips only. We also fished for plaice, with nets, together with a friend and his children. When not actively engaged with the family or the house, my father would spend his spare time reading. He always read a lot, fiction as well as fact, mostly history or science. He had a very inquisitive mind and loved to learn new things up until the last days of his life. In all this he was much aided by his excellent memory; he seemed unable to forget anything he had learned and, unfortunately, unable to realize that other people did not have quite his powers of memory ... he could be quite impatient with me. And I had to be careful when asking him a question: there was always the risk of a long and enthusiastic lecture, containing a lot more information than I wanted. ... Before his death my father often said to me that he was content with his life, that it had been a good life. I do believe he died a happy man.
We have mentioned above a number of awards that Hörmander received. There is one other major award that we must mention, namely the Wolf Prize which was awarded to Hörmander in 1988. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1976 and he served as a vice president of the International Mathematics Union from 1987 to 1990.


References (show)

  1. Biography in Encyclopaedia Britannica. http://www.britannica.com/biography/Lars-V-Hormander
  2. N Aslund, Lars Hörmander Tal minnesdagen den 2 februari 2013 (Swedish), SMS Bulletinen No 6 (February 2013), 24-26.
  3. J Boman, Lars Hörmander - nagra minnen. Anförande vid Minnesdagen i Lund 2013-02-02 (Swedish), SMS Bulletinen No 6 (February 2013), 27-30.
  4. J Boman and R Sigurdsson (eds.), To the Memory of Lars Hörmander (1931-2012), Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 62 (8) (2015), 890-907.
  5. L Boutet de Monvel, Review: The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators III: Pseudo-Differential Operators, by Lars Hörmander, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 16 (1) (1987), 161-167.
  6. L Boutet de Monvel, The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators IV: Fourier Integral Operator, by Lars Hörmander, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 16 (1) (1987), 161-167.
  7. M Derridj, Sur l'apport de Lars Hörmander en analyse complexe, Gaz. Math. No. 137 (2013), 82-88.
  8. L Ehrenpreis, Review: Linear Partial Differential Operators, by Lars Hörmander, Science, New Series 143 (3603) (1964), 234.
  9. L Garding, Hörmander's work on linear differential operators, Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Stockholm, 1962 (Stockholm, 1963).
  10. L Garding, Hörmander's work on linear differential operators, Fields Medallists' lectures, World Sci. Ser. 20th Century Math. 5 (World Sci. Publ., River Edge, NJ, 1997), 77-81.
  11. L Garding, Lars Hörmander wins the Wolf prize (Swedish), Normat 36 (3) (1988), 133-134.
  12. M González Taboada, Lars V Hörmander (Spanish), Gac. R. Soc. Mat. Esp. 12 (1) (2009), 191-207.
  13. T Hawai, Review: Notions of Convexity, by Lars Hörmander, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 32 (4) (1995), 429-431.
  14. S Hoffman, Review: Linear Partial Differential Operators, by Lars Hörmander, Amer. Math. Monthly 73 (3) (1966), 323.
  15. L Hörmander, Autobiography of Lars Hörmander, in M Atiyah and D Iagolnitzer (eds.), Fields Medallists Lectures (World Sci. Publ., River Edge, NJ, 1997), 82-85.
  16. L Hörmander, Looking forward from ICM 1962, in M Atiyah and D Iagolnitzer (eds.), Fields Medallists Lectures (World Sci. Publ., River Edge, NJ, 1997), 86-103.
  17. C Kiselman, Lars Hörmander - nagra minnen (Swedish), SMS Bulletinen No 6 (February 2013), 13-19.
  18. N Lerner, A tribute to Lars Hörmander, Matapli No. 100 (2013), 27-51.
  19. N Lerner, A tribute to Lars Hörmander, Eur. Math. Soc. Newsl. No. 88 (2013), 24-34.
  20. N Lerner, Lars Hörmander, 1931-2012 (French), Gaz. Math. No. 137 (2013), 61-81.
  21. A Melin, Lars Hörmander Tal minnesdagen den 2 februari 2013 (Swedish), SMS Bulletinen No 6 (February 2013), 10-12.
  22. B Schechter, Lars V Hormander, 81, Influential Mathematician, New York Times (21 December 2012).
  23. J E Smoller, Review: An Introduction to Complex Analysis in Several Variables, by Lars Hörmander, SIAM Review 33 (2) (1991), 338.
  24. M E Taylor, Review: The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators I: Distribution Theory and Fourier Analysis, by Lars Hörmander, Amer. Math. Monthly 92 (1985), 745-749.
  25. M E Taylor, Review: The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators II: Differential Operators with Constant Coefficients, by Lars Hörmander, Amer. Math. Monthly 92 (1985), 745-749.
  26. V Thomée, Nagra minnen fran min tid med Lars Hörmander (Swedish), SMS Bulletinen No 6 (February 2013), 20-23.
  27. F Treves, Review: The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators I: Distribution Theory and Fourier Analysis, by Lars Hörmander, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 10 (2) (1984), 337-340.
  28. F Treves, Review: The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators II: Differential Operators with Constant Coefficients, by Lars Hörmander, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 10 (2) (1984), 337-340.
  29. M Weil, Lars Hormander, prize-winning mathematician, dies at 81, Washington Post (8 December 2012).
  30. C H Wilcox, Review: The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators I: Distribution Theory and Fourier Analysis, by Lars Hörmander, SIAM Review 27 (2) (1985), 311-313.
  31. C H Wilcox, Review: The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators II: Differential Operators with Constant Coefficients, by Lars Hörmander, SIAM Review 27 (2) (1985), 311-313.
  32. C H Wilcox, Review: The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators III: Pseudo-Differential Operators, by Lars Hörmander, SIAM Review 28 (2) (1986), 285-287.
  33. C H Wilcox, The Analysis of Linear Partial Differential Operators IV: Fourier Integral Operator, by Lars Hörmander, SIAM Review 28 (2) (1986), 285-287.

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Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update August 2016