Arthur B. Coble
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Arthur Byron Coble (November 3, 1878 – December 8, 1966) was an American mathematician. He did research on finite geometries and the group theory related to them,
Cremona transformation In algebraic geometry, the Cremona group, introduced by , is the group of birational automorphisms of the n-dimensional projective space over a field It is denoted by Cr(\mathbb^n(k)) or Bir(\mathbb^n(k)) or Cr_n(k). The Cremona group is naturally ...
s associated with the Galois theory of equations, and the relations between hyperelliptic theta functions, irrational binary invariants, the Weddle surface and the Kummer surface. He was President of the American Mathematical Society from 1933 to 1934.


Biography


Early life

Arthur Coble was born on November 3, 1878, in Williamstown, Pennsylvania. His mother Emma was a schoolteacher. When Coble was born, his father Ruben was the manager of a store. Later, he became president of a bank. Coble's parents belonged to Evangelical Lutheran Church. Coble was brought up strictly as an Evangelical Lutheran; however, he rejected this Church when he reached adulthood. Coble entered Gettysburg College in 1893, and completed his A.B. in 1897. He spent a year as a public school teacher. He entered Johns Hopkins University in 1898 to pursue his graduate studies. He completed his Ph.D. from the university in 1902. His Ph.D. thesis was ''The Relation of the Quartic Curve to Conics''. His thesis supervisor was English-born mathematician Frank Morley. Later, Coble recalled how Morley made it "a cardinal point to have on hand a sufficient variety of thesis problems to accommodate particular tastes and capacities."


Academic career

In 1902, Coble became an instructor in mathematics at the University of Missouri. One year later, in 1903, he was appointed to Johns Hopkins University as Morley's research assistant. In 1903, he published his doctoral dissertation as ''The quartic curve as related to conics'' in the ''Transactions of the American Mathematical Society'' and took up the research assistant position in
Baltimore, Maryland Baltimore ( , locally: or ) is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Maryland, fourth most populous city in the Mid-Atlantic, and the 30th most populous city in the United States with a population of 585,708 in 2020. Baltimore was ...
. In 1902, American businessman Andrew Carnegie founded the Carnegie Institution of Washington. The research of Coble and Morley were one of the first pieces of research the Institution supported. The funding of the Institute was generous enough to allow Coble to use the grant to travel abroad. He traveled to Germany where he studied at Greifswald University and the University of Bonn. He wanted to work with Eduard Study, who was well known to mathematicians at Johns Hopkins University because he had taught there in 1893. Coble returned to the United States for the start of the 1904-05 session. He was appointed an instructor in mathematics at Johns Hopkins University. Coble married Abby Walker Adams Whitney in 1905. They had four children. Coble was promoted to associate professor at Johns Hopkins University in 1909. He left Johns Hopkins after he was offered a full professorship at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) in 1918. He remained at Illinois for the rest of his career. He was a visiting professor at the University of Chicago in 1919 and was at Johns Hopkins University in 1927–28. He became head of the Department of Mathematics at the UIUC in 1934 and he held that position until his retirement in 1947. During these years, Coble served on many university and college committees, including eleven years on the University Council and eight years on the Executive Committee of the UIUC College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.


American Mathematical Society

Coble was active with the American Mathematical Society (AMS) from 1912 to 1940. He was vice-president of the AMS in 1917. From 1920 to 1925, he edited the ''Transactions of the American Mathematical Society''. He also was involved with editing the ''American Journal of Mathematics'' over many years between 1918 and 1933. From 1933 to 1934, he was President of the AMS. At that time, the AMS was in some financial difficulties. Coble dealt with the problem effectively.


Later life

By the time he retired in 1947 his health was already deteriorating due to Parkinson's disease. After his retirement, he accepted a one-year post at
Haverford College Haverford College ( ) is a private liberal arts college in Haverford, Pennsylvania. It was founded as a men's college in 1833 by members of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), began accepting non-Quakers in 1849, and became coeducational ...
but after teaching for one semester he resigned due to poor health. In 1956, he was involved in a car crash. Because of that crash, he was unable to walk without assistance. He then moved to Lykens, Pennsylvania, and spent his final ten years of his life there. He died on December 8, 1966, in a hospital in
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Harrisburg is the capital city of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, United States, and the county seat of Dauphin County. With a population of 50,135 as of the 2021 census, Harrisburg is the 9th largest city and 15th largest municipality in Pe ...
.


Research

Early mathematical research papers written by Coble when he was teaching at Johns Hopkins University, include: ''On the relation between the three-parameter groups of a cubic space curve and a quadric surface'' (1906); ''An application of the form-problems associated with certain Cremona groups to the solution of equations of higher degree'' (1908); ''An application of Moore's cross-ratio group to the solution of the sextic equation'' (1911); ''An application of finite geometry to the characteristic theory of the odd and even theta functions'' (1913); and ''Point sets and allied Cremona groups'' (1915). Coble was interested in finite geometries and the related group theory, and in the Cremona transformations related to the Galois theory of equations. Later in his career, Coble also studied the relations between hyperelliptic theta functions, irrational binary invariants, the
Weddle surface In algebraic geometry, a Weddle surface, introduced by , is a quartic surface in 3-dimensional projective space, given by the locus of vertices of the family of cones passing through 6 points in general position. Weddle surfaces have 6 nodes an ...
and the Kummer surface. Coble published the monograph ''Algebraic geometry and theta functions'' in the tenth volume of ''American Mathematical Society Colloquium Publications'' in 1929, and it was republished by the American Mathematical Society in 1961 and 1982. Coble published ''Configurations defined by theta functions'', which reviewed the invariant theory of Cremona transformations as developed by Coble in his earlier papers, in the ''
Duke Mathematical Journal ''Duke Mathematical Journal'' is a peer-reviewed mathematics journal published by Duke University Press. It was established in 1935. The founding editors-in-chief were David Widder, Arthur Coble, and Joseph Miller Thomas Joseph Miller Thomas (16 ...
'' in 1939. A linear homogeneous transformation with integral coefficients is associated with a Cremona transformation. These transformations form a group, which Coble studied. In 1940, Coble published ''Trilinear forms'' in the ''Duke Mathematical Journal''. In 1946, he published ''Ternary and quaternary elimination'', which extends work by mathematicians Francis Sowerby Macaulay and Bartel Leendert van der Waerden, and also extends work done by Frank Morley and Coble some 20 years earlier.


See also

*
Coble curve In algebraic geometry, a Coble curve is an irreducible degree-6 planar curve with 10 double points (some of them may be infinitely near points). They were studied by . See also * Coble surface References * *{{Citation , last1=Coble , first1=A ...
*
Coble surface In algebraic geometry, a Coble surface was defined by to be a smooth rational projective surface with empty anti-canonical linear system , −K, and non-empty anti-bicanonical linear system , −2K, . An example of a Coble surface is th ...
*
Coble variety In mathematics, the Coble variety is the moduli space of ordered sets of 6 points in the projective plane, and can be represented as a double cover of the projective 4-space branched over the Igusa quartic. It is a 4-dimensional variety that was fir ...
*
Coble hypersurface In algebraic geometry, a Coble hypersurface is one of the hypersurfaces associated to the Jacobian variety of a curve of genus 2 or 3 by Arthur Coble. There are two similar but different types of Coble hypersurfaces. *The Kummer variety of the Jac ...


Notes


External links

*
Arthur B. Coble Papers, 1903-53
{{DEFAULTSORT:Coble, Arthur Byron 1878 births 1966 deaths 20th-century American mathematicians Group theorists Johns Hopkins University alumni Johns Hopkins University faculty University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign faculty University of Chicago faculty Presidents of the American Mathematical Society Mathematicians from Pennsylvania University of Missouri mathematicians University of Missouri faculty