Mark Kac Scientist

Mark Kac (/kɑːts/ KAHTS; Polish: Marek Kac; 3 August 1914 – 26 October 1984) was a Polish American mathematician. He was born to a Polish-Jewish family; their town, Kremenets (Polish: "Krzemieniec"), originally a Polish city, changed hands from the Russian Empire to Poland when Kac was a child. His main interest was probability theory. His question, "Can one hear the shape of a drum?" set off research into spectral theory, with the idea of understanding the extent to which the spectrum allows one to read back the geometry. (In the end, the answer was "no", in general.) Kac completed his Ph.D. in mathematics at the Polish University of Lwów in 1937 under the direction of Hugo Steinhaus. While there, he was a member of the Lwów School of Mathematics. After receiving his degree he began to look for a position abroad, and in 1938 was granted a scholarship from the Parnas Foundation which enabled him to go work in the United States. He arrived in New York City in November, 1938. With the onset of World War II, Kac was able to remain in America, while his parents and brother who remained were murdered by the Germans in the mass executions of the Jews of Krzemieniec (August 1942). From 1939 until 1961 he was at Cornell University, first as an instructor, then from 1943 as assistant professor and from 1947 as full professor. While there, he became a naturalized US citizen in 1943. In the academic year 1951–1952 Kac was on sabbatical at the Institute for Advanced Study. In 1952 Kac, with Theodore H. Berlin, introduced the spherical model of a ferromagnet (a variant of the Ising model) and, with J. C. Ward, found an exact solution of the Ising model using a combinatorial method. In 1961 he left Cornell and went to Rockefeller University in New York City. In the early 1960s he worked with George Uhlenbeck and P. C. Hemmer on the mathematics of a van der Waals gas. After twenty years at Rockefeller University, he moved to the University of Southern California where he spent the rest of his career.

Personal facts

Mark Kac
Birth dateAugust 03, 1914
Birth place
Kremenets , Russian Empire
Nationality
Polish language
Citizenship
United States
Date of deathOctober 26, 1984
Place of death
California , United States
Residence
United States
Education
Lviv University
Known for
Feynman–Kac formula
Erdős–Kac theorem

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Scientist

awards
George David Birkhoff Prize
doctoral advisor
doctoral student
William Newcomb
Harry Kesten
William J. LeVeque
Murray Rosenblatt
Field of study
Mathematics

Mark Kac on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.nasonline.org/publications/biographical-memoirs/memoir-pdfs/kac-mark.pdf