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David E. Muller

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221:. His mother was one of the first women to receive a Ph.D. in mathematics in the United States, and he credited her with inspiring his early interest in mathematics. She lost her position as an instructor in pure mathematics at Texas because she became pregnant, and according to Hermann Joseph Muller's biographer, "her colleagues felt that a mother could not give full attention to classroom duties and remain a good mother." As a child he was with his parents in 233:. He returned to Austin with his mother in July 1934. His mother obtained a divorce in Texas in the summer of 1935. Sometime between October 1935 and January 1936, Jessie Muller married Carlos Alberto Offermann, who had been working in Muller's laboratory and was on a visit to Austin from the Soviet Union at that time. 276:. He was predeceased by his wife Alice Mimi Muller, who died in Urbana, Illinois, in 1989, and divorced (posthumously) in 2009 from his second wife, Denise Impens Muller, in Las Cruces, New Mexico. 517: 497: 492: 487: 512: 482: 411: 384: 429: 335: 254: 206: 417: 421: 129: 403: 295: 169: 102: 502: 273: 177: 218: 190: 128:(1953–92), after which he became an emeritus professor, and was an adjunct professor of mathematics at the 261: 165: 125: 60: 149: 92: 250: 237:
left the Soviet Union in 1937 after the start of Stalin's political persecutions. After a brief stay in
234: 202: 187: 290: 507: 477: 472: 145: 378: 137: 441: 121: 300: 82: 425: 331: 437: 356: 306: 268:. He is survived by his children, Chandra L. Muller and Kenneth J. Muller. His half-sister, 157: 97: 249:, where he married Dorothea Kantorowicz in May 1939. They had a daughter, Helen Juliette. 374: 161: 153: 466: 407: 210: 117: 42: 230: 156:
proposed the majority logic decoding for the first time. Furthermore, he invented
173: 132:(1995–2008). Muller received his BS in 1947 and his PhD in 1951 in physics from 265: 183: 285: 246: 226: 180: 141: 87: 353:
4th Annual Symposium on Switching Circuit Theory and Logical Design (SWCT)
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Pioneering Women in American Mathematics — The Pre-1940 PhD's
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Muller, David E. (1963). "Infinite sequences and finite machines".
242: 214: 124:. He was a professor of mathematics and computer science at the 269: 303:(an established root finding method in numerical analysis) 116:(November 2, 1924 – April 27, 2008) was an American 416:. History of Mathematics. Vol. 34 (1st ed.). 380:
Groups, the theory of ends, and context-free languages
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ry in electronic computers. He also co-invented the
75: 67: 49: 28: 21: 330:. Chicago, Ill: Marquis Who's Who. p. 3002. 518:University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign faculty 144:(or Muller C-gate), a device used to implement 209:(formerly Jesse Marie Jacobs). He was born in 436:See p.260–262. Biography on p.470-472 of the 8: 229:in 1933–34. His family was dissolved in the 18: 498:American people of British-Jewish descent 398: 396: 385:Journal of Computer and System Sciences 318: 136:; an honorary PhD was conferred by the 456:, Cornell University Press, 1982, 133. 245:, in September 1937, Hermann moved to 255:Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 140:in 1989. He was the inventor of the 7: 493:21st-century American mathematicians 488:20th-century American mathematicians 513:New Mexico State University faculty 186:as finitely generated groups with 16:American mathematician (1924–2008) 14: 71:mathematician, computer scientist 272:, is a professor emerita at the 260:David E. Muller died in 2008 in 483:20th-century American engineers 201:David E. Muller was the son of 152:. He discovered the codes, and 207:Jessie Jacobs Muller Offermann 1: 454:Genes, Radiation, and Society 418:American Mathematical Society 217:, when his parents taught at 422:London Mathematical Society 328:Who's Who in the World 2007 130:New Mexico State University 534: 326:Marquis Who's Who (2008). 160:, an automaton model for 274:University of New Mexico 168:Muller is known for the 390:(1983), no. 3, 295--310 219:The University of Texas 438:Supplementary Material 373:David E. Muller, and 166:geometric group theory 126:University of Illinois 61:Las Cruces, New Mexico 296:Reed–Muller expansion 251:Hermann Joseph Muller 235:Hermann Joseph Muller 203:Hermann Joseph Muller 170:Muller–Schupp theorem 103:Muller–Schupp theorem 146:asynchronous circuit 361:10.1109/SWCT.1963.8 138:University of Paris 114:David Eugene Muller 178:finitely generated 122:computer scientist 431:978-0-8218-4376-5 337:978-0-8379-1137-3 176:, characterizing 150:Reed–Muller codes 111: 110: 93:Reed–Muller codes 525: 503:Coding theorists 457: 450: 444: 435: 400: 391: 371: 365: 364: 348: 342: 341: 323: 307:Muller automaton 291:Reed–Muller code 286:Muller C-element 142:Muller C-element 88:Muller C-element 56: 39:November 2, 1924 38: 36: 19: 533: 532: 528: 527: 526: 524: 523: 522: 463: 462: 461: 460: 451: 447: 432: 402: 401: 394: 372: 368: 350: 349: 345: 338: 325: 324: 320: 315: 301:Muller's method 282: 270:Helen J. Muller 199: 158:Muller automata 107: 98:Muller automata 83:Muller's method 63: 58: 54: 45: 40: 34: 32: 24: 23:David E. Muller 17: 12: 11: 5: 531: 529: 521: 520: 515: 510: 505: 500: 495: 490: 485: 480: 475: 465: 464: 459: 458: 452:Elof Carlson, 445: 430: 408:LaDuke, Jeanne 392: 375:Paul E. Schupp 366: 343: 336: 317: 316: 314: 311: 310: 309: 304: 298: 293: 288: 281: 278: 198: 195: 162:infinite words 154:Irving S. Reed 109: 108: 106: 105: 100: 95: 90: 85: 79: 77: 76:Known for 73: 72: 69: 65: 64: 59: 57:(aged 83) 53:April 27, 2008 51: 47: 46: 41: 30: 26: 25: 22: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 530: 519: 516: 514: 511: 509: 506: 504: 501: 499: 496: 494: 491: 489: 486: 484: 481: 479: 476: 474: 471: 470: 468: 455: 449: 446: 443: 439: 433: 427: 423: 419: 415: 414: 409: 405: 399: 397: 393: 389: 386: 383: 381: 376: 370: 367: 362: 358: 354: 347: 344: 339: 333: 329: 322: 319: 312: 308: 305: 302: 299: 297: 294: 292: 289: 287: 284: 283: 279: 277: 275: 271: 267: 263: 258: 256: 253:received the 252: 248: 244: 240: 236: 232: 228: 224: 220: 216: 212: 208: 204: 196: 194: 192: 189: 185: 182: 179: 175: 172:, joint with 171: 167: 163: 159: 155: 151: 147: 143: 139: 135: 131: 127: 123: 119: 118:mathematician 115: 104: 101: 99: 96: 94: 91: 89: 86: 84: 81: 80: 78: 74: 70: 68:Occupation(s) 66: 62: 52: 48: 44: 31: 27: 20: 453: 448: 412: 387: 379: 369: 352: 346: 327: 321: 259: 231:Soviet Union 200: 191:word problem 188:context-free 113: 112: 55:(2008-04-27) 508:Logic gates 478:2008 deaths 473:1924 births 404:Green, Judy 184:free groups 174:Paul Schupp 467:Categories 313:References 266:New Mexico 262:Las Cruces 35:1924-11-02 257:in 1946. 247:Edinburgh 227:Leningrad 181:virtually 410:(2008). 355:: 3–16. 280:See also 134:Caltech 428:  420:, The 334:  239:Madrid 223:Berlin 211:Austin 197:Family 43:Austin 243:Paris 215:Texas 164:. In 426:ISBN 332:ISBN 241:and 225:and 205:and 120:and 50:Died 29:Born 442:AMS 440:at 357:doi 469:: 424:. 406:; 395:^ 388:26 377:, 264:, 213:, 193:. 434:. 382:. 363:. 359:: 340:. 37:) 33:(

Index

Austin
Las Cruces, New Mexico
Muller's method
Muller C-element
Reed–Muller codes
Muller automata
Muller–Schupp theorem
mathematician
computer scientist
University of Illinois
New Mexico State University
Caltech
University of Paris
Muller C-element
asynchronous circuit
Reed–Muller codes
Irving S. Reed
Muller automata
infinite words
geometric group theory
Muller–Schupp theorem
Paul Schupp
finitely generated
virtually
free groups
context-free
word problem
Hermann Joseph Muller
Jessie Jacobs Muller Offermann
Austin

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