Ernst Witt (26 June 1911 – 3 July 1991) was a German mathematician, one of the leading algebraists of his time.[1]
Biography
Witt was born on the island of Alsen, then a part of the German Empire. Shortly after his birth, his parents moved the family to China to work as missionaries,[2] and he did not return to Europe until he was nine.[2]
After his schooling, Witt went to the University of Freiburg and the University of Göttingen. He joined the NSDAP (Nazi Party) and was an active party member.[3] Witt was awarded a Ph.D. at the University of Göttingen in 1933 with a thesis titled: "Riemann-Roch theorem and zeta-Function in hypercomplexes"[4] (Riemann-Rochscher Satz und Zeta-Funktion im Hyperkomplexen) that was supervised by Gustav Herglotz, with Emmy Noether suggesting the topic for the doctorate.[5] He qualified to become a lecturer and gave guest lectures in Göttingen and Hamburg.[5] He became associated with the team led by Helmut Hasse who led his habilitation. In June 1936, he gave his habilitation lecture.[4]
In the 1970s, Witt claimed that in 1940 he had discovered what would eventually be named the "Leech lattice" many years before John Leech discovered it in 1965, but Witt did not publish his discovery and the details of exactly what he did are unclear.[12][13]
^ abSegal, Sanford L. (23 November 2014). Mathematicians under the Nazis. Princeton University Press. p. 451. ISBN978-0-691-16463-2.
^According to Schappacher (letter in Mathematical Intelligencer 1996) it was most certainly him and not Oswald Teichmüller, who attended Emmy Noether's private seminar held in her house while wearing his SA-uniform.
^ abFrei, Günther; Lemmermeyer, Franz; Roquette, Peter J. (16 January 2014). Emil Artin and Helmut Hasse: The Correspondence 1923-1958. Contributions in Mathematical and Computational Sciences. Vol. 5. Göttingen: Springer Science & Business Media. p. 439. doi:10.1007/978-3-0348-0715-9. ISBN978-3-0348-0715-9.
^Edixhoven, Bas; Couveignes, Jean-Marc (20 June 2011). Computational Aspects of Modular Forms and Galois Representations: How One Can Compute in Polynomial Time the Value of Ramanujan's Tau at a Prime (AM-176). Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 46. ISBN978-0-691-14201-2.