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| Fotografii | Monede | Timbre | Schite | Cautare |
Harold attended Accrington Grammar School from the age of about ten years. His main interests were mathematics and chemistry :
There were other subjects which interested Harold too, for he loved reading and read every Dickens classic that he could borrow from the local Public Library. In 1924 he obtained two scholarships to attend Manchester University, one from Lancashire County and a university scholarship. He studied mathematics and chemistry at Manchester being taught complex analysis by Mordell and applied mathematics by Milne . At first he seriously considered a career in chemistry, and he wanted to take both subjects to honours level. But slowly he became more certain that his future was with mathematics so, when he found he could not continue to study both subjects, the decision was not too difficult. He graduated from Manchester with First Class honours in mathematics in 1927. After Manchester he went to Trinity College, Cambridge, to take another 'first degree' which was a common thing to do at that time, and he was advised to do so by Milne . Among the friends he made at Cambridge were Coxeter , Paley , Sadler, and Ursell. He had Fowler as an applied mathematics director, and at first his pure mathematics director was S Pollard, then later was Besicovitch . Coxeter wrote (see for example ):
Davenport was most attracted by Littlewood 's lectures on the theory of primes and those of Besicovitch on almost periodic functions. Davenport wrote a Ph.D. thesis at Cambridge under Littlewood 's supervision. His research involved studying the distribution of quadratic residues, and he invented new methods to attack his problems involving character sums and exponential sums.
Davenport met Heilbronn while in Germany and they began a research collaboration which lasted for many years. After returning to Cambridge his research struck an incredibly rich vein and he published a great number of papers. At this time life in Cambridge was enriched by a large number of visiting mathematicians who were escaping from the Nazi threat on the Continent. Those who interacted with Davenport included Richard Rado , Hirsch , Courant , Taussky (later Taussky-Todd ), Kober and Mahler . He left Cambridge in 1937, accepting an offer from Mordell of an assistant lectureship at the University of Manchester. There he was influenced by Mordell to become interested in both the geometry of numbers and Diophantine approximation . While he taught at Manchester he had a number of outstanding colleagues including Mahler , Erdös , and Beniamino Segre . During his four years on the staff he received a number of honours including a fellowship of the Royal Society and the Adams Prize from the University of Cambridge, both in 1940. In 1941 Davenport was appointed to the chair of mathematics at the University College of North Wales at Bangor. Three year later he married Anne Lofthouse who was on the staff of the modern languages department. They had two children, James and Richard. Harold and Anne left Wales and moved to London in 1945 when Davenport succeeded Jeffrey as Astor professor of mathematics in University College, London. Rogers writes about the time shortly after Davenport came to University College (see ):
Stanford University in California provided an excellent place for study leave during 1947-48 and the friendships he made with Pólya and Szego lasted throughout their lives. In 1958 Davenport returned to Cambridge as Rouse Ball Professor of Mathematics on the retirement of Besicovitch . This gave him less administrative duties, and more opportunities to make visits to other universities such as Göttingen, Ann Arbor, Boulder, and Milan. His style of doing mathematics at Cambridge is described by Lewis in :
Davenport worked on number theory , in particular the geometry of numbers, Diophantine approximation and the analytic theory of numbers. He contributed to Waring 's problem early in his career by proving that every sufficiently large number was the sum of sixteen fourth powers. He wrote a number of important textbooks and monographs. The higher arithmetic (1952) was a book written at a low level in an attempt to bring results in number theory before as wide an audience as possible. At the most advanced level he wrote a monograph Analytic methods for Diophantine equations and Diophantine inequalities (1962) which includes many of his contributions extending the Hardy - Littlewood method. He also wrote an important monograph on the analytic approach to the theory of the distribution of primes Multiplicative number theory (1967). We mentioned above that Davenport had been elected a Fellow of the Makdougall while still an assistant lecturer. In 1967 the Society awarded him its Sylvester Medal:
He was President of the London Mathematical Society during 1957-59, and was awarded the Berwick Prize by that Society in 1954. He was elected to the Royal Society of Science of Uppsala in 1964. Davenport described his philosophy of mathematics in the following way:
Always a heavy smoker (he tried to give up the habit several times but always failed), Davenport succumbed to lung cancer at a young age. His influence on those around him is summed up in as follows:
Davenport's character is described in :
Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |