Lu Jiaxi (mathematician)
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Lu Jiaxi (; June 10, 1935 – October 31, 1983) was a self-taught Chinese mathematician who made important contributions in
combinatorial design theory Combinatorial design theory is the part of combinatorial mathematics that deals with the existence, construction and properties of systems of finite sets whose arrangements satisfy generalized concepts of ''balance'' and/or ''symmetry''. These c ...
. He was a high school physics teacher in a remote city and worked in his spare time on the problem of large sets of disjoint Steiner triple systems.


Biography


Background

Lu Jiaxi was born in a poor family in Shanghai. His father was a seller of soy sauce concentrate. His parents had four children, but the three older children all died early from illness, and Lu Jiaxi was the only surviving child. When he was in junior middle school, his father died from an illness that the family could not afford to treat, so he started working after finishing junior middle school in 1949 to earn a living. He served an apprenticeship at an automobile hardware firm in Shanghai. In October 1951, he was admitted to a statistics training course in Shenyang offered by the administration for electrical equipment industry of
Northeast China Northeast China or Northeastern China () is a geographical region of China, which is often referred to as "Manchuria" or "Inner Manchuria" by surrounding countries and the West. It usually corresponds specifically to the three provinces east of ...
, and he finished first in his class. He was then assigned to a motor factory in Harbin. While working at the factory, he self-studied high school materials. He also learned Russian at a night school, and later English and Japanese to be able to look up literature. In 1956, he joined the fight against the flooding of
Songhua River The Songhua or Sunghwa River (also Haixi or Xingal, russian: Сунгари ''Sungari'') is one of the primary rivers of China, and the longest tributary of the Amur. It flows about from the Changbai Mountains on the China–North Korea bo ...
, for which he was commended. In 1957, he passed the college entrance exam and was admitted to Department of Physics of Jilin Normal University, now called
Northeast Normal University Northeast Normal University (; often abbreviated NENU or ) is one of the six national normal universities in the People's Republic of China, located in Changchun, Jilin province. The university was ranked number 37 in the comprehensive ranki ...
(not the university that took the same name in 2002). After graduation in 1961, he was assigned to Baotou Steel and Iron Institute, now called Inner Mongolia University of Science and Technology, as a teaching assistant. In 1962, after reorganization of the institute, he was assigned first to the Teaching and Research Office of Baotou Education Bureau, then to several middle schools in Baotou as a physics teacher. He worked at Baotou Eighth Middle School, Baotou Fifth Middle School, Baotou Twenty-fourth Middle School from 1965 to 1973, and Baotou Ninth Middle School from 1973 to his death in 1983. Because of his physics background and his past experience as a factory worker, he was also in charge of a school-run factory which produced radio components. He married in the summer of 1972 to a doctor introduced by his colleague.


Mathematical research

In the summer of 1956, he read a popular science book on mathematical problems written by Chinese mathematician Sun Zeying (, published under the name J. Tseying Sun) called ''Shuxue Fangfa Qu Yin'' () and was fascinated by the
Kirkman's schoolgirl problem Kirkman's schoolgirl problem is a problem in combinatorics proposed by Rev. Thomas Penyngton Kirkman in 1850 as Query VI in '' The Lady's and Gentleman's Diary'' (pg.48). The problem states: Fifteen young ladies in a school walk out three abre ...
. He devoted himself into solving the generalized version of the problem, studying relevant areas in mathematics on his own and spending a lot of time on research. In December 1961, he wrote up a paper on its solution and another paper on
Latin square In combinatorics and in experimental design, a Latin square is an ''n'' × ''n'' array filled with ''n'' different symbols, each occurring exactly once in each row and exactly once in each column. An example of a 3×3 Latin sq ...
s and sent them to Institute of Mathematics of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS); ), known by Academia Sinica in English until the 1980s, is the national academy of the People's Republic of China for natural sciences. It has historical origins in the Academia Sinica during the Republi ...
. The reply letter came in February 1963, in which they did not directly comment on the papers but suggested that he check them himself and send them to journals if the results were new, and they included some references on latest developments. He revised his paper on the generalized Kirkman's schoolgirl problem and submitted it to ''Shuxue Tongbao'' ( zh, s=数学通报, l=Bulletin of mathematics) in March 1963. His paper was too long and technical for the journal which aimed at middle school teachers, however, it took the journal one year to reply to him that he should submit it elsewhere. After further revisions, he submitted the paper to ''
Acta Mathematica Sinica ''Acta Mathematica Sinica'' (English series) is a peer-reviewed mathematics journal published quarterly by Springer. Founded in 1936 and split into a Chinese series and an English series in 1985, the journal publishes articles on all areas of mat ...
'' on March 14, 1965. On February 7, 1966, he received the rejection letter from the journal criticizing it as "basically not really new results, worthless". It was realized after his death that this rejection was a serious mistake. In 1966, he sent two other papers to journals with no response, since with the start of the
Cultural Revolution The Cultural Revolution, formally known as the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, was a sociopolitical movement in the People's Republic of China (PRC) launched by Mao Zedong in 1966, and lasting until his death in 1976. Its stated goa ...
all academic activities were disrupted. He was discouraged by the rejections and wrote in his diary that he "had since then given up the thought of submitting papers". After the Cultural Revolution, he resubmitted some revised papers, but they were not accepted. In April 1979, in some journal issues of 1974 and 1975 that he managed to borrow from Beijing, he unexpectedly learned from a paper of
Haim Hanani Haim Hanani ( as Chaim Chojnacki– 8 April 1991) was a Polish-born Israeli mathematician, known for his contributions to combinatorial design theory, in particular for the theory of pairwise balanced designs and for the proof of an existenc ...
that the problem which he solved in his 1965 paper had been solved and first published in 1971 by Ray-Chaudhuri and
R. M. Wilson Richard Michael Wilson (23 November 1945) is a mathematician and a professor emeritus at the California Institute of Technology. Wilson and his PhD supervisor Dijen K. Ray-Chaudhuri, solved Kirkman's schoolgirl problem in 1968. Wilson is known ...
, which was a big blow to him. He went on to tackle the problem of large sets of disjoint Steiner triple systems. Zhu Lie (), a professor of mathematics at Soochow University working also in combinatorial mathematics, realized the importance of his work and suggested that he submit it to the international journal ''
Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A The ''Journal of Combinatorial Theory'', Series A and Series B, are mathematical journals specializing in combinatorics and related areas. They are published by Elsevier. ''Series A'' is concerned primarily with structures, designs, and applicatio ...
''. He wrote to its editorial board that he had essentially solved the problem, and the editors replied to him that if what he said was true, it would be a major achievement. (Many leaders in the field had worked on the problem starting from in 1917. Only a few special cases were solved at the time. A note published by in 1981 said: " extensive amount of work has been done on
his His or HIS may refer to: Computing * Hightech Information System, a Hong Kong graphics card company * Honeywell Information Systems * Hybrid intelligent system * Microsoft Host Integration Server Education * Hangzhou International School, in ...
problem ... This problem remains far from settled however".) So he brushed up his English and borrowed a typewriter to type up his work. It was a tremendous task for him as he could type at most four pages a night. He submitted a total of nearly 200 typed pages to the journal. The journal received six of his series of papers between September 1981 and March 1983 and published the first three in March 1983. The editors informed him that they would also publish his next three papers. He also sent a paper on resolvable balanced incomplete block designs to ''Acta Mathematica Sinica'' in August 1979, and a revised version was received by the journal in September 1983. This paper was published in July 1984 and was regarded as equally important by international experts. In spite of his heavy teaching duties, he carried on with his private mathematical research, often working until after midnight. He also made occasional trips to Beijing to find library resources. He told his colleagues that while he liked physics more, certain material conditions were required for physics research, but he only needed paper to do mathematics. Unfortunately, laborious work and harsh living conditions made his health deteriorate over time. His family of four lived in a small house of ten-odd square meters. The only table at home was used by his daughters, so he had to do his calculations on a broken
kang bed-stove The ''kang'' (; Manchu: ''nahan'', kk, кән) is a traditional heated platform, 2 metres or more long, used for general living, working, entertaining and sleeping in the northern part of China, where the winter climate is cold. It is made of ...
. On his trips to Beijing, he bought
hard seat The Hard seat () or Semi-cushioned seat, abbreviated YZ, is the cheapest class of seating in China Railway. It is available on non-high-speed trains. The name of Hard seat derives comes from the hard, wooden seats in the Mao era on regular pass ...
tickets since he could not afford sleeper tickets. He ate his dried food in a library in the daytime and slept on a bench in a train station at night. He sometimes wrote in his diary about how his mental fatigue affected his research and his teaching, and that he needed to get healthier for his research. After he had received dozens of copies of the journal issue containing his first three papers, his family and friends reminded him to get some rest, but he said that he could not since he had not much time. To have a better research environment, he tried to get transferred to university with his friends' help since 1978, but he could not find any suitable position after several years of effort.


Late recognition and death

His Western peers discovered a leader in the field with exceptional achievements, while he still remained largely unknown to the Chinese mathematical community. In the first ever combinatorial mathematics conference in China held in Dalian in July 1983, when two Canadian mathematicians Eric Mendelsohn and
John Adrian Bondy John Adrian Bondy (born 1944 in London) is a retired English mathematician, known for his work in combinatorics and graph theory. Career Bondy received his Ph.D. in graph theory from the University of Oxford in 1969. His advisor was Dominic We ...
, who were the referees of Lu's papers, arrived and asked for Lu Jiaxi, one of the organizers thought they were looking for the President of the Chinese Academy of Sciences with the same sounding name. It was the first time the Chinese combinatorialists got to know him. Upon hearing Lu present his work in a session, Wu Lisheng of Soochow University recommended that he should give a talk on it at the closing ceremony. After his talk, he received a unanimous accolade. In August, he took part in a combinatorics workshop in Hefei as a helper and gave a talk there. Although he had gained recognition from scholars in his field, he was still living in poverty. School leaders did not appreciate his engagement in research, seeing it as a deviation from his work duties. They even assigned him more duties such as timekeeping on sports day to keep him occupied. In a school general meeting, the principal reprimanded him, saying, "We are a middle school. Someone wants to be a scientist, he may as well be transferred to the Academy of Sciences." When he was finally invited to mathematical conferences in China, his middle school refused to support his travel fee, saying that according to the rules allowances were provided only for teaching related activities. He had to borrow from his friends to attend the conferences. The conferences brought him into the mathematical community. He was invited as a speaker to the fourth national conference of the
Chinese Mathematical Society The Chinese Mathematical Society (CMS, ) is an academic organization for Chinese mathematicians, with the official websitwww.cms.org.cn It is a member of China Association of Science and Technology. History The Chinese Mathematical Society (CMS) ...
in late October. Several universities in China wanted to offer him positions, and he decided to go to
South China Normal University South China Normal University (SCNU; ) is a comprehensive university that is part of Double First Class University Plan and Project 211 in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, in the People's Republic of China. It is a Chinese state Doubl ...
. The Canadian mathematicians were planning to invite him for a visit at University of Toronto. After attending the national conference of the Chinese Mathematical Society in
Wuhan Wuhan (, ; ; ) is the capital of Hubei Province in the People's Republic of China. It is the largest city in Hubei and the most populous city in Central China, with a population of over eleven million, the ninth-most populous Chinese city an ...
, which ended on October 27, he hurried back to Baotou by train in order not to miss his classes. After stopping briefly at Beijing for the libraries, he arrived home at about 6 in the evening of Sunday, October 30, 1983. He told his wife joyfully about the praises he received in the last few months and his future research plan. At about 1 am that night, he suffered from a sudden heart attack in his sleep and died. Although his wife was a doctor, she did not have any equipment to save him, not even a telephone at home to call for help. He was survived by his wife Zhang Shuqin ( zh, s=张淑琴) and two daughters. Only two days before his death, his middle school received a letter from the President of
University of Toronto The University of Toronto (UToronto or U of T) is a public university, public research university in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, located on the grounds that surround Queen's Park (Toronto), Queen's Park. It was founded by royal charter in 1827 ...
David Strangway David William Strangway, (June 7, 1934 – December 13, 2016) was a Canadian geophysicist and university administrator. Strangway was the founder, first President and first Chancellor of Quest University Canada, a private non-profit liberal ...
written on September 30. In the letter, he asked the school principal for permission to transfer Lu to a university for the development of Chinese mathematics. On November 23, David Strangway sent a letter of condolences to Lu's middle school and family, in which he said that people would greatly miss "Prof. Lu Jiaxi" for his knowledge and contributions. In January 1984, an editor of '' Mathematical Reviews'' sent Lu an invitation letter to be a reviewer, not knowing of his death. After his death, the Inner Mongolia government helped his family repay their debts and honored him for his achievements. On the first anniversary of his death, a memorial gathering was held by the government officials at Baotou First Workers' Cultural Palace, and the Chairman of the Autonomous Region issued a document titled "Learn from Comrade Lu Jiaxi" (). He was given Special Class Award in the first Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region Science and Technology Progress Award in 1985. An investigation on his research was carried out by a number of Chinese mathematicians. Although his 1961 and 1963 papers were lost, they found the manuscript of his 1965 paper and confirmed that it was the first paper to solve the generalized Kirkman's schoolgirl problem completely. In fact, according to Zhu Lie, it contained an asymptotically stronger result than that in the paper by Ray-Chaudhuri and Wilson. Eric Mendelsohn praised Lu's large set theorem as one of the most significant achievements in the field in the past 20 years. He wrote an article on Lu's work, in which he regretted that "Lu Jia-xi should have had a distinguished career as a mathematician. ... He, however, spent too many years as a high school teacher with virtually no time to do research and virtually no contact with the research community". The seventh paper in the series on disjoint Steiner triple systems treating the cases for the last six values in the theorem, which he had announced to have solved in the Dalian combinatorial mathematics conference, was left unfinished as a 24-page manuscript, with an outline and a few results. (Actually, once the cases for three of the values were proved, the cases for the other three values would follow immediately from previous results.) A few Chinese mathematicians tried to use the procedure sketched in the manuscript or other methods to solve the cases without success. The very last part of the theorem the proof of which Lu had not finished writing down before his death was finally completed by Luc Teirlinck in 1989. Although Teirlinck's proof did not follow the outline in the manuscript, it nevertheless made use of the combinatorial structures that Lu had constructed. Lu Jiaxi was awarded posthumously in 1987 the First Class Award of the State Natural Science Award, then the highest honor in science in China, for his work on large sets of disjoint Steiner triple systems.


Bibliography


Published papers

* * * * * * * n English translation:


Some unpublished papers

See the reference for a more complete list. * * * *


Book

* This book contains his published papers and his 1965 paper, with the two papers originally in Chinese translated into English.


References

{{reflist, refs= {{cite news, title=生命的塑像──为数学家陆家羲(1935–1983)而作, author=张廓 (Zhang Kuo), newspaper= People's Daily, date=November 2, 1984, page=8, language=zh {{cite journal, title=关于S(2,3,v)的大集和RBIB的存在性问题──我国组合数学工作者陆家羲同志的贡献, author=吴利生 (Wu Lisheng), journal=数学研究与评论 (Journal of Mathematical Research and Exposition), volume=4, number=1, year= 1984, pages=151–154, language=zh, url=http://jmre.dlut.edu.cn/cn/ch/reader/view_abstract.aspx?flag=1&file_no=19840135&journal_id=cn {{cite journal, title=The work of Lu Jia-xi, author=Eric Mendelsohn, journal=数学研究与评论 (Journal of Mathematical Research and Exposition), volume=5, number=3, year= 1985, pages=143–144, url=http://jmre.dlut.edu.cn/cn/ch/reader/view_abstract.aspx?flag=1&file_no=19850331&journal_id=cn {{cite journal, title=一颗数学之星的升起和陨落──关于中年数学家陆家羲同志献身科学事业的调查报告, author=吴金 (Wu Jin), author2=王国忠 (Wang Guozhong), author3=曾宪东 (Zeng Xiandong), journal=内蒙古社会科学 (Inner Mongolia Social Sciences), year=1984, number=1, pages=1–8, language=zh {{cite journal, title=關於陸家羲證明『大集定理』的對話, author=羅見今 (Luo Jianjin), journal=數學傳播 (Mathmedia), year=1989, volume=13, number=3, pages=48–55, url=https://web.math.sinica.edu.tw/math_media/d133/13304.pdf, language=zh {{cite journal, title=A Completion of Lu's Determination of the Spectrum for Large Sets of Disjoint Steiner Triple Systems, author=Luc Teirlinck, journal=Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, volume=57, number=2, date=1991, pages = 302–305, url=https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/81194896.pdf, doi=10.1016/0097-3165(91)90053-j, doi-access=free {{cite journal, title=纪念自学成材的组合数学家陆家羲, author=罗见今 (Luo Jianjin), journal=高等数学研究 (Studies in College Mathematics), date=1998, number=4, pages=41–44, language=zh {{cite journal, title=纪念自学成材的组合数学家陆家羲(续), author=罗见今 (Luo Jianjin), journal=高等数学研究 (Studies in College Mathematics), date=1999, number=1, pages=48, 22, language=zh {{cite journal, title=陆家羲与组合设计大集, author=康庆德 (Kang Qingde), journal=高等数学研究 (Studies in College Mathematics), date=2008, volume=11, number=1, pages=8–17, language=zh {{cite web, url=http://www.math.nctu.edu.tw/UPLOAD_FILES/NEWS_FILES/107_3.pdf, title=Three public problems, author=Kang Qingde, website=Department of Applied Mathematics, NCTU, language=en,zh, accessdate= December 29, 2018 {{cite journal, title=有关组合数学家陆家羲的几点史实澄清, author=朱安远 (Zhu Anyuan), author2=郭华珍 (Guo Huazhen), author3=朱婧姝 (Zhu Jingshu), journal=中国市场 (China Market), year=2014, number=22, pages=158–164, language=zh {{cite journal, title=中国最伟大的业余数学家:陆家羲──纪念组合数学大师陆家羲老师诞辰80周年, author=朱安远 (Zhu Anyuan), author2=朱婧姝 (Zhu Jingshu), journal=中国市场 (China Market), year=2015, number=23, pages=188–199, language=zh {{cite journal, title=On the number of disjoint Mendelsohn triple systems, author= C. C. Lindner, journal=Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, volume=30, number=3, date=May 1981, pages = 326–330, url=https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/82012488.pdf, doi=10.1016/0097-3165(81)90028-5, doi-access=free 1935 births 1983 deaths 20th-century Chinese mathematicians Amateur mathematicians Combinatorialists Mathematicians from Shanghai Northeast Normal University alumni