László Fuchs (born June 24, 1924) is a Hungarian-born American mathematician, the Evelyn and John G. Phillips Distinguished Professor Emeritus in Mathematics at Tulane University.[1] He is known for his research and textbooks in group theory and abstract algebra.[2][3]
Fuchs, L. (1958), Abelian Groups, Publishing House of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, 367pp, MR0106942.[9] Reprinted by Pergamon Press, International Series of Monographs on Pure and Applied Mathematics, 1960.
Fuchs, L. (1963), Partially ordered algebraic systems, Oxford: Pergamon Press, 229pp, MR0171864. Translated into Russian and German.[4]
Fuchs, László (1970), Infinite abelian groups. Vol. I, Pure and Applied Mathematics, Vol. 36, New York: Academic Press, 290pp, MR0255673.
Fuchs, László (1973), Infinite abelian groups. Vol. II, New York: Academic Press, 363pp, MR0349869.
Fuchs, László (1980), Abelian p-Groups and Mixed Groups, Séminaire de Mathématiques Supérieures [Seminar on Higher Mathematics], vol. 70, Montreal, Que.: Presses de l'Université de Montréal, 139pp, ISBN2-7606-0468-3, MR0569744.
Fuchs, László (1983), Modules over valuation domains, Vorlesungen aus dem Fachbereich Mathematik der Universität Essen [Lecture Notes in Mathematics at the University of Essen], vol. 9, Essen: Universität Essen Fachbereich Mathematik, 133pp, MR0709258.
Fuchs, László; Salce, Luigi (1985), Modules over valuation domains, Lecture Notes in Pure and Applied Mathematics, vol. 97, New York: Marcel Dekker Inc., 317pp, ISBN0-8247-7326-8, MR0786121.
Fuchs, László; Salce, Luigi (2001), Modules over non-Noetherian domains, Mathematical Surveys and Monographs, vol. 84, Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society, 613pp, ISBN0-8218-1963-1, MR1794715.
At Tulane University, Fuchs held the W. R. Irby Professorship from 1979 to 1992, and the Evelyn and John G. Phillips Distinguished Professorship from then until his retirement.[4]
^ abGöbel, Rüdiger (1996), "László Fuchs—a personal evaluation of his contributions to mathematics", Periodica Mathematica Hungarica. Journal of the János Bolyai Mathematical Society, 32 (1–2): 13–29, doi:10.1007/BF01879728, MR1407905, S2CID119541716.