Ralph Duncan James (8 February 1909, Liverpool, England – 19 May 1979, Salt Spring Island, British Columbia, Canada)[1] was a Canadian mathematician working on number theory and mathematical analysis.
Born in Liverpool, Ralph moved with his parents to Vancouver , British Columbia when he was 10 years old. After graduating from high school, Ralph attended University of British Columbia. After graduating, he continued in mathematics, writing a master’s thesis on Tangential Coordinates. Proceeding to University of Chicago, he studied number theory and Waring's problem under L. E. Dickson. In 1932 he was a awarded a Ph.D. on the strength of his dissertation Analytical Investigations of Waring's Theorem. He continued post-graduate study, first with E. T. Bell at California Institute of Technology, then in 1934 with G. H. Hardy at Cambridge University. He published in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society and extended some work of Viggo Brun in 1938.
Ralph James was a professor of mathematics at University of California, Berkeley from 1934 to 1939. He was then called to University of Saskatchewan where he became head of the mathematics department.[2] In 1943 he began his long tenure at University of British Columbia, becoming head of the department in 1948. James made contributions to the theory of the Perron integral and to solution of Goldbach's conjecture.
Since 1978, the Canadian Mathematical Society have awarded the Coxeter–James Prize in his honor.
Papers
Ralph Duncan James published the following papers in the course of his career:
1934: Mathematische Annalen "On the representation of integers as sums of pyramidal numbers"
1934: Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 36(2):395–444 "The value of the number g(k) in Waring's problem" MR1501751
1938: Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 43(2):296–302 "A problem in additive number theory" MR1501944
1939: Duke Mathematical Journal 5:948–62 "Integers which are not represented by certain ternary quadratic forms" MR0001230
1942: (with Hermann Weyl ) American Journal of Mathematics 64:539–52 "Elementary note on prime number problems of Vinogradoff’s type" MR0006745
1943: Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 49:422–32 "On the sieve method of Viggo Brun" MR0008229
1946: (with Walter Gage ) Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada Section III(3) 40:25–35 "A generalized integral" MR0021081
1949: Bulletin of the AMS 55:246–60 "Recent progress on the Goldbach problem" MR0028893
1950: Canadian Journal of Mathematics 2:297–306 "A generalized integral II" MR0036344
1954: (with Ivan Niven) Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society 5:834–8 "Unique factorization in multiplicative systems" MR0060002
1955: Bulletin of the AMS 61:1–15 "Integrals and summable trigonometric series" MR0067228
1956: Pacific Journal of Mathematics 6:99–110 "Summable trigonometric series" MR0078474
1968: Canadian Mathematical Bulletin 11:733–5 "The factors of a square-free integer" MR0240038
1970: American Mathematical Monthly 77(1):94 "Review: Studies in Number Theory"
References
↑British Columbia Death Registrations, 1872-1986; 1992-1993
↑Prominent people from University of Saskatchewan
Ralph James dies suddenly at Salt Spring Island home from Gulf Islands Driftwood, May 23, 1979, page 3.
O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Ralph Duncan James", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews, http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/James_Ralph.html.
Ralph Duncan James at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
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