Alexander Murray MacBeath
Alexander Murray MacBeath (30 June 1923 Glasgow – 14 May 2014 Warwick)[1][2][3] was a Scottish mathematician who worked on Riemann surfaces. MacBeath surfaces and MacBeath regions are named after him.
Early life and education
[edit]MacBeath was the son of Alexander MacBeath, a philosopher and logician who took a position at Queen's University Belfast in 1925,[4] soon after Murray was born. Murray also studied at Queen's University, earning a B.A. with honours in 1943.[1]
During World War II, he worked in Hut 7 of the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park, breaking ciphers used for military communications by the Japanese navy and, later, the army.[5]
He earned an M.A. (again with honours) from Clare College, Cambridge in 1948. With a Commonwealth Fund fellowship, he then attended Princeton University,[1] where he earned his Ph.D. on "The Geometry of Non-Homogeneous Lattices" in 1950 under the supervision of Emil Artin.[6]
Career
[edit]He taught at Keele University and the University of Dundee before moving to the University of Birmingham in 1963 where he stayed until 1979 as Mason Professor,[3] then moved back to the University of Pittsburgh in the United States until he reached their statutory retirement age of 60.[1]
He subsequently took up a position at the University of Dundee where he remained for a number of years, before moving to Warwickshire where at the University of Warwick he held the position of emeritus professor of mathematics.
Death
[edit]Professor MacBeath died on 14 May 2014 in Warwick, England.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Thomas, Campbell (2014), "Obituary: Professor Murray MacBeath, mathematician and wartime codebreaker", The Scotsman (Friday 27 June)
- ^ Professor Murray MacBeath, The Times, Friday 27 June 2014
- ^ a b Harvey, Bill (July 2014), "Murray Macbeath", LMS Newsletter, London Mathematical Society – via MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive
- ^ "Obituary: Professor Alexander MacBeath", Glasgow Herald, 16 December 1964.
- ^ Alexander Murray Macbeath at MacTutor University of St Andrews
- ^ Alexander Murray MacBeath at the Mathematics Genealogy Project