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Donald Erik Sarason (January 26, 1933 – April 8, 2017) was an American
mathematician A mathematician is someone who uses an extensive knowledge of mathematics in their work, typically to solve mathematical problems. Mathematicians are concerned with numbers, data, quantity, structure, space, models, and change. History On ...
who made fundamental advances in the areas of
Hardy space In complex analysis, the Hardy spaces (or Hardy classes) ''Hp'' are certain spaces of holomorphic functions on the unit disk or upper half plane. They were introduced by Frigyes Riesz , who named them after G. H. Hardy, because of the paper . ...
theory and VMO. He was one of the most popular doctoral advisors in the Mathematics Department at UC Berkeley. He supervised 39 Ph.D. theses at UC Berkeley.


Education

*B.S. in Physics from the
University of Michigan , mottoeng = "Arts, Knowledge, Truth" , former_names = Catholepistemiad, or University of Michigania (1817–1821) , budget = $10.3 billion (2021) , endowment = $17 billion (2021)As o ...
in 1955. *Master's degree (A.M.) in Physics from the University of Michigan in 1957. *Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Michigan in 1963. Doctoral thesis supervised by
Paul Halmos Paul Richard Halmos ( hu, Halmos Pál; March 3, 1916 – October 2, 2006) was a Hungarian-born American mathematician and statistician who made fundamental advances in the areas of mathematical logic, probability theory, statistics, operator ...
.


Career

Postdoc at the
Institute for Advanced Study The Institute for Advanced Study (IAS), located in Princeton, New Jersey, in the United States, is an independent center for theoretical research and intellectual inquiry. It has served as the academic home of internationally preeminent scholar ...
in 1963–1964, supported by a
National Science Foundation The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent agency of the United States government that supports fundamental research and education in all the non-medical fields of science and engineering. Its medical counterpart is the National I ...
Postdoctoral Fellowship. Then Sarason went to the
University of California Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) is a public land-grant research university in Berkeley, California. Established in 1868 as the University of California, it is the state's first land-grant univ ...
as an Assistant Professor (1964–1967), Associate Professor (1967–1970) and until his retirement, Professor (1970–2012).


Accomplishments

Sarason was awarded a
Sloan Fellowship The Sloan Research Fellowships are awarded annually by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation since 1955 to "provide support and recognition to early-career scientists and scholars". This program is one of the oldest of its kind in the United States. ...
for 1969–1971. Sarason was the author of 78 mathematics publications spanning the fifty years from 1963 to 2013. Sarason was the sole author on 56 of these publications; the other 22 publications were written with a total of 25 different co-authors. The huge influence of Sarason’s publications on other mathematicians is reflected in unusually high citation rates.
Google Scholar Google Scholar is a freely accessible web search engine that indexes the full text or metadata of scholarly literature across an array of publishing formats and disciplines. Released in beta in November 2004, the Google Scholar index includes p ...
shows that Sarason’s publications have been cited over four-thousand times in the mathematical literature. Sarason wrote an amazing total of 456 reviews for Mathematical Reviews/MathSciNet. These reviews were published from 1970 to 2009. Teaching awards from UC Berkeley Mathematics Undergraduate Student Association, 2003 and 2006. At various times, served on the editorial boards of ''
Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society ''Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society'' is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal of mathematics published by the American Mathematical Society. As a requirement, all articles must be at most 15 printed pages. According to the ' ...
'', ''
Integral Equations and Operator Theory ''Integral Equations and Operator Theory'' is a journal dedicated to operator theory and its applications to engineering and other mathematical sciences. As some approaches to the study of integral equations (theoretically and numerically) constit ...
'', and ''
Journal of Functional Analysis The ''Journal of Functional Analysis'' is a mathematics journal published by Elsevier. Founded by Paul Malliavin, Ralph S. Phillips, and Irving Segal, its editors-in-chief are Daniel W. Stroock, Stefaan Vaes, and Cedric Villani. It is covered ...
''.


Selected works

*1967. Generalized Interpolation in H^\infty.Sarason, D. Generalized Interpolation in H^\infty. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc., 127:179–203, 1967. Sarason reproved a theorem of G. Pick on when an interpolation problem can be solved by a holomorphic function that maps the disk to itself; this is often called Nevanlinna-Pick interpolation. Sarason’s approach not only gave a natural unification of the Pick interpolation problem with the Carathoédory interpolation problem (where the values of \phi and its first N-1 derivatives at the origin are given), but it led to the Commutant Lifting theorem of Sz.-Nagy and Foiaş which inaugurated an operator theoretic approach to many problems in function theory. *1975. Functions of Vanishing Mean Oscillation. Sarason’s work played a major role in the modern development of function theory on the unit circle in the complex plane. In Sarason he showed that H^\infty + C is a closed subalgebra of L^\infty. Sarason’s paper called attention to outstanding open questions concerning algebras of functions on the unit circle. Then in an important 1975 paper that has since been cited by hundreds of other papers, Sarason introduced the space VMO of functions of vanishing mean oscillation. A complex-valued function defined on the unit circle in the complex plane has vanishing mean oscillation if the average amount of the absolute value of its difference from its average over an interval has limit 0 as the length of the interval shrinks to 0. Thus VMO is a subspace of the set of functions with bounded mean oscillation, called BMO. Sarason proved that the set of bounded functions in VMO equals the set of functions in H^\infty + C whose complex conjugates are in H^\infty + C. Extensions of these ideas led to a spectacular description of the closed subalgebras between H^\infty and L^\infty in Chang (written by one of Sarason’s former students) and Marshall. *1978. Function Theory on the Unit Circle. Notes for lectures at a conference at
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Virginia Tech (formally the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and informally VT, or VPI) is a public land-grant research university with its main campus in Blacksburg, Virginia. It also has educational facilities in six regi ...
, Blacksburg, Virginia, June 19–23, 1978. On June 19–23, 1978, Sarason gave a series of ten lectures at a conference hosted by Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (now Virginia Tech) on analytic function theory on the unit circle. In these lectures he discussed a number of recent results in the field, bringing together classical ideas and more recent ideas from functional analysis and from the extension of the theory of Hardy spaces to higher dimensions. The lecture notes, entitled Function Theory on the Unit Circle were made available by the math department at VPI. Though only available as a mimeographed document, they circulated widely and were very influential. Of all his publications, these lecture notes are the fifth most frequently cited according to the bibliographic database MathSciNet. *1994. Sub-Hardy Hilbert Spaces in the Unit Disk. This influential book developed the theory of the de Branges–Rovnyak spaces \mathcal(b), which were first introduced in de Branges and Rovnyak. Sarason pioneered the abstract treatment of contractive containment and established a fruitful connection between the spaces \mathcal(b) and the ranges of certain Toeplitz operators. Using reproducing kernel Hilbert space techniques, he gave elegant proofs of the Julia–Carathéodory and the Denjoy–Wolff theorems. Two recent accounts of the theory are Emmanuel Fricain and Javad Mashreghi and Dan Timotin. *2007. Complex Function Theory: Second Edition. The American Mathematical Society.Sarason, Donald. ''Complex Function Theory'', second edition. American Mathematical Society, Providence, 2007. This textbook for a first course in complex analysis at the advanced undergraduate level provides an unusually clear introduction to the theory of analytic functions.


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Sarason, Donald 1933 births 2017 deaths Scientists from Detroit University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts alumni University of California, Berkeley alumni Mathematicians from Michigan Sloan Research Fellows