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Pál Turán

Pál Turán (Hungarian: [ˈpaːl ˈturaːn]; 18 August 1910 – 26 September 1976) also known as Paul Turán, was a Hungarian mathematician who worked primarily in extremal combinatorics.

In 1940, because of his Jewish origins, he was arrested by the Nazis and sent to a labour camp in Transylvania, later being transferred several times to other camps. While imprisoned, Turán came up with some of his best theories, which he was able to publish after the war.

Turán had a long collaboration with fellow Hungarian mathematician Paul Erdős, lasting 46 years and resulting in 28 joint papers.

Biography edit

Early years edit

Turán was born into a Jewish family in Budapest on 18 August 1910. Pál's outstanding mathematical abilities showed early, already in secondary school he was the best student.[1][2]

At the same period of time, Turán and Pál Erdős were famous answerers in the journal KöMaL. On 1 September 1930, at a mathematical seminar at the University of Budapest, Turan met Erdős. They would collaborate for 46 years and produce 28 scientific papers together.[3][1]

Turán received a teaching degree at the University of Budapest in 1933. In the same year he published two major scientific papers in the journals of the American and London Mathematical Societies.[4] He got the PhD degree under Lipót Fejér in 1935 at Eötvös Loránd University.

As a Jew, he fell victim to numerus clausus, and could not get a stable job for several years. He made a living as a tutor, preparing applicants and students for exams.[1] It was not until 1938 that he got a job at a rabbinical training school in Budapest as a teacher's assistant, by which time he had already had 16 major scientific publications and an international reputation as one of Hungary's leading mathematicians.[5][4]

He married Edit (Klein) Kóbor in 1939; they had one son, Róbert.[6]

In World War II edit

In September 1940 Turán was interned in labour service. As he recalled later, his five years in labour camps eventually saved his life: they saved him from ending up in a concentration camp, where 550,000 of the 770,000 Hungarian Jews were murdered during World War II. In 1940 Turán ended up in Transylvania for railway construction. Turán said that one day while working another prisoner addressed him by his surname, saying that he was working extremely clumsily:

"An officer was standing nearby, watching us work. When he heard my name, he asked the comrade whether I was a mathematician. It turned out, that the officer, Joshef Winkler, was an engineer. In his youth, he had placed in a mathematical competition; in civilian life he was a proof-reader at the print shop where the periodical of the Third Class of the Academy (Mathematical and Natural sciences) was printed. There he had seen some of my manuscripts."[7]

Winkler wanted to help Turán and managed to get him transferred to an easier job. Turán was sent to the sawmill's warehouse, where he had to show the carriers the right-sized timbers.[7] During this period, Turán composed and was partly able to record a long paper on the Riemann zeta function.[5][8]

Turán was subsequently transferred several times to other camps. As he later recalled, the only way he was able to keep his sanity was through mathematics, solving problems in his head and thinking through problems.[4]

In July 1944 Turán worked on a brick factory near Budapest.[9] His and the other prisoners' task was to carry the brick cars from the kilns to the warehouses on rails that crossed at several points with other tracks. At these crossings the trolleys would "bounce" and some of the bricks would fall out, causing a lot of problems for the workers. This situation led Turan to consider how to achieve the minimum number of crossings for m kilns and n warehouses. It was only after the war, in 1952, that he was able to work seriously on this problem.[7]

Turán was liberated in 1944, after which he was able to return to work at the rabbinical school in Budapest.[4]

After WWII edit

Turán became associate professor at the University of Budapest in 1945 and full professor in 1949.[1][5] In the early post-war years, the streets were patrolled by soldiers. On occasion, random people were seized and sent to penal camps in Siberia. Once such a patrol stopped Turan, who was on his way home from university. The soldiers questioned the mathematician and then forced him to show them the contents of his briefcase. Seeing a reprint of an article from a pre-War Soviet magazine among the papers, the soldiers immediately let the mathematician go. The only thing Turán said about that day in his correspondence with Erdös was that he had "come across an extremely interesting way of applying number theory..."[10]

In 1952 he married again, the second marriage was to Vera Sós, a mathematician. They welcomed a son, György, in 1953[a]. The couple published several papers together.[6]

As one of his students recalled, Turán was a very passionate and active man - in the summer he held maths seminars by the pool in between his swimming and rowing training. In 1960 he celebrated his 50th birthday and the birth of his third son[b] by swimming across the Danube.[5]

Turán was a member of the editorial boards of leading mathematical journals, he worked as a visiting professor at many of the top universities in the world. He was a member of the Polish, American and Austrian Mathematical Societies. In 1970, he was invited to serve on the committee of the Fields Prize. Turán was also founded and served as the president of the János Bolyai Mathematical Society.[12]

Death edit

Around 1970 Turán was diagnosed with leukaemia, but the diagnosis was revealed only to his wife Vera Sós. She decided not to tell her husband about his illness. Only in 1976 she told about it to Pál Erdős. Sós was sure that Turán was ‘too much in love with life’ and would have fallen into despair at the news of his fatal illness, and would not have been able to work properly. However, as Erdős parried, Turán did not lose his spirit even in the Nazi camps and came up with his brilliant theories there. Erdős deeply regretted that Turán had been kept unaware of his illness because he had put off certain works and books 'for later', hoping that he would soon feel better, and in the end was never able to finish them. Turán died in Budapest on 26 September 1976 of leukemia, aged 66.[13]: 8 

Work edit

Turán worked primarily in number theory,[13]: 4  but also did much work in analysis and graph theory.[14]

Number theory edit

In 1934, Turán used the Turán sieve to give a new and very simple proof of a 1917 result of G. H. Hardy and Ramanujan on the normal order of the number of distinct prime divisors of a number n, namely that it is very close to  . In probabilistic terms he estimated the variance from  . Halász says "Its true significance lies in the fact that it was the starting point of probabilistic number theory".[15]: 16  The Turán–Kubilius inequality is a generalization of this work.[13]: 5 [15]: 16 

Turán was very interested in the distribution of primes in arithmetic progressions, and he coined the term "prime number race" for irregularities in the distribution of prime numbers among residue classes.[13]: 5  With his coauthor Knapowski he proved results concerning Chebyshev's bias. The Erdős–Turán conjecture makes a statement about primes in arithmetic progression. Much of Turán's number theory work dealt with the Riemann hypothesis and he developed the power sum method (see below) to help with this. Erdős said "Turán was an 'unbeliever,' in fact, a 'pagan': he did not believe in the truth of Riemann's hypothesis."

Analysis edit

Much of Turán's work in analysis was tied to his number theory work. Outside of this he proved Turán's inequalities relating the values of the Legendre polynomials for different indices, and, together with Paul Erdős, the Erdős–Turán equidistribution inequality.

Graph theory edit

Erdős wrote of Turán, "In 1940–1941 he created the area of extremal problems in graph theory which is now one of the fastest-growing subjects in combinatorics." The field is known more briefly today as extremal graph theory. Turán's best-known result in this area is Turán's graph theorem, that gives an upper bound on the number of edges in a graph that does not contain the complete graph Kr as a subgraph. He invented the Turán graph, a generalization of the complete bipartite graph, to prove his theorem. He is also known for the Kővári–Sós–Turán theorem bounding the number of edges that can exist in a bipartite graph with certain forbidden subgraphs, and for raising Turán's brick factory problem, namely of determining the crossing number of a complete bipartite graph.

Power sum method edit

Turán developed the power sum method to work on the Riemann hypothesis.[15]: 9–14  The method deals with inequalities giving lower bounds for sums of the form

  hence the name "power sum".[16]: 319 

Aside from its applications in analytic number theory, it has been used in complex analysis, numerical analysis, differential equations, transcendental number theory, and estimating the number of zeroes of a function in a disk.[16]: 320 

Publications edit

  • Ed. by P. Turán. (1970). Number Theory. Amsterdam: North-Holland Pub. Co. ISBN 978-0-7204-2037-1.
  • Paul Turán (1984). On a New Method of Analysis and Its Applications. New York: Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 978-0-471-89255-7. Deals with the power sum method.[17]
  • Paul Erdős, ed. (1990). Collected Papers of Paul Turán. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-05-4298-2.[18]

Honors edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Later professor of mathematics at University of Illinois Chicago
  2. ^ Tamás Turán became a philosopher and scholar of the Hebrew language .[11]
  1. ^ a b c d Alpár 1981, p. 271.
  2. ^ "Magyar Életrajzi Lexikon: Turán Pál" (in Hungarian). Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár (Hungarian Electronic Library). Retrieved 21 June 2008.
  3. ^ Erdős 1998, p. 2.
  4. ^ a b c d "Paul Turán" (in Russian). School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St Andrews, Scotland. Retrieved 2022-04-26.
  5. ^ a b c d Szüsz 1980, p. 11.
  6. ^ a b Babai, László (2001). . University of Chicago. Archived from the original (PostScript) on 2007-02-07. Retrieved 22 June 2008.
  7. ^ a b c Turán 1977, p. 7.
  8. ^ P. Turán, «A note of welcome», Journal of Graph Theory 1 (1977), pp. 7-9.
  9. ^ Turán 1977, p. 8.
  10. ^ "Mathematical Graffiti #1 – Pál Turán e la Siberia… evitata" (in Italian). MaddMaths. Retrieved 2022-04-26.
  11. ^ Tamas Turan. Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Center for Jewish Studies of the Institute for Minority Studies
  12. ^ Alpár 1981, p. 271-271.
  13. ^ a b c d Erdős, Paul (1980). "Some personal reminiscences of the mathematical work of Paul Turán" (PDF). Acta Arithmetica. 37: 3–8. doi:10.4064/aa-37-1-3-8. ISSN 0065-1036. Retrieved 22 June 2008.
  14. ^ See the death notice, publication list, and appreciations by József Szabados (analysis and approximation theory), by Pál Erdős and Mihály Szalay (number theory), and by Miklós Simonovits (graphy theory) in Matematikai Lapok 25 (1974) pages 211-250 (http://real-j.mtak.hu/9373/1/MTA_MatematikaiLapok_1974.pdf); although mostly Hungarian, much of the mathematics is easily understood and many of the citations are to English articles. Retrieved 10 April 2022.
  15. ^ a b c Halász, G. (1980). "The number-theoretic work of Paul Turán". Acta Arithmetica. 37: 9–19. doi:10.4064/aa-37-1-9-19. ISSN 0065-1036.
  16. ^ a b Tijdeman, R. (April 1986). "Book reviews: On a new method of analysis and its applications" (PDF). Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. 14 (2): 318–22. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1986-15456-X. Retrieved 22 June 2008.
  17. ^ Tijdeman, Robert (1986). "Review: On a new method of analysis and its applications by Paul Turán". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. New Series. 14 (2): 318–322. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1986-15456-X.
  18. ^ Vaughan, R. C. (1991). "Review of Collected Papers of Paul Turán". Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society. 23 (2): 193–197. doi:10.1112/blms/23.2.193.

Sources edit

  • Hersch, Reuben (1993). "A Visit to Hungarian Mathematics". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 15 (2): 13–26. doi:10.1007/BF03024187. S2CID 122827181.
  • Szüsz, P. (1980). "P. Turán: Reminiscences of his student". Journal of Approximation Theory. 29 (1): 11–12. doi:10.1016/0021-9045(80)90135-5.
  • Turán, Paul (1977). "A note of welcome". Journal of Graph Theory. 1: 7–9. doi:10.1002/jgt.3190010105.
  • Erdős, Paul (1998). "Some Notes on Turin's Mathematical Work" (PDF). Journal of Approximation Theory. 29 (1): 2–6. doi:10.1016/0021-9045(80)90133-1.
  • Alpár, L. (1981). "In memory of Paul Turán". Journal of Number Theory. Academic Press. 13 (3): 271–. doi:10.1016/0022-314X(81)90012-3.
  • Erdős, Paul (1980). "Some notes on Turán's mathematical work" (PDF). Journal of Approximation Theory. 29 (1): 2–6. doi:10.1016/0021-9045(80)90133-1. Retrieved 22 June 2008.

External links edit

pál, turán, native, form, this, personal, name, turán, pál, this, article, uses, western, name, order, when, mentioning, individuals, hungarian, ˈpaːl, ˈturaːn, august, 1910, september, 1976, also, known, paul, turán, hungarian, mathematician, worked, primaril. The native form of this personal name is Turan Pal This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals Pal Turan Hungarian ˈpaːl ˈturaːn 18 August 1910 26 September 1976 also known as Paul Turan was a Hungarian mathematician who worked primarily in extremal combinatorics Pal TuranBorn 1910 08 18 18 August 1910Budapest Austria HungaryDied26 September 1976 1976 09 26 aged 66 Budapest HungaryNationalityHungarianAlma materEotvos Lorand UniversityKnown forExtremal graph theoryTuran graphTuran numberTuran s brick factory problem Turan sieveTuran s inequalitiesTuran s lemmaTuran s methodTuran s theoremTuran Kubilius inequalityErdos Turan conjectureErdos Turan inequalityErdos Turan conjecture on additive bases Erdos Turan constructionErdos Turan Koksma inequalityKovari Sos Turan theoremAwardsICM Speaker 1970 Kossuth Prize 1948 1952 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsEotvos Lorand UniversityDoctoral advisorLipot FejerDoctoral studentsLaszlo BabaiJanos PintzPeter SzuszIn 1940 because of his Jewish origins he was arrested by the Nazis and sent to a labour camp in Transylvania later being transferred several times to other camps While imprisoned Turan came up with some of his best theories which he was able to publish after the war Turan had a long collaboration with fellow Hungarian mathematician Paul Erdos lasting 46 years and resulting in 28 joint papers Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 In World War II 1 3 After WWII 1 4 Death 2 Work 2 1 Number theory 2 2 Analysis 2 3 Graph theory 2 4 Power sum method 3 Publications 4 Honors 5 Notes 6 Sources 7 External linksBiography editEarly years edit Turan was born into a Jewish family in Budapest on 18 August 1910 Pal s outstanding mathematical abilities showed early already in secondary school he was the best student 1 2 At the same period of time Turan and Pal Erdos were famous answerers in the journal KoMaL On 1 September 1930 at a mathematical seminar at the University of Budapest Turan met Erdos They would collaborate for 46 years and produce 28 scientific papers together 3 1 Turan received a teaching degree at the University of Budapest in 1933 In the same year he published two major scientific papers in the journals of the American and London Mathematical Societies 4 He got the PhD degree under Lipot Fejer in 1935 at Eotvos Lorand University As a Jew he fell victim to numerus clausus and could not get a stable job for several years He made a living as a tutor preparing applicants and students for exams 1 It was not until 1938 that he got a job at a rabbinical training school in Budapest as a teacher s assistant by which time he had already had 16 major scientific publications and an international reputation as one of Hungary s leading mathematicians 5 4 He married Edit Klein Kobor in 1939 they had one son Robert 6 In World War II edit In September 1940 Turan was interned in labour service As he recalled later his five years in labour camps eventually saved his life they saved him from ending up in a concentration camp where 550 000 of the 770 000 Hungarian Jews were murdered during World War II In 1940 Turan ended up in Transylvania for railway construction Turan said that one day while working another prisoner addressed him by his surname saying that he was working extremely clumsily An officer was standing nearby watching us work When he heard my name he asked the comrade whether I was a mathematician It turned out that the officer Joshef Winkler was an engineer In his youth he had placed in a mathematical competition in civilian life he was a proof reader at the print shop where the periodical of the Third Class of the Academy Mathematical and Natural sciences was printed There he had seen some of my manuscripts 7 Winkler wanted to help Turan and managed to get him transferred to an easier job Turan was sent to the sawmill s warehouse where he had to show the carriers the right sized timbers 7 During this period Turan composed and was partly able to record a long paper on the Riemann zeta function 5 8 Turan was subsequently transferred several times to other camps As he later recalled the only way he was able to keep his sanity was through mathematics solving problems in his head and thinking through problems 4 In July 1944 Turan worked on a brick factory near Budapest 9 His and the other prisoners task was to carry the brick cars from the kilns to the warehouses on rails that crossed at several points with other tracks At these crossings the trolleys would bounce and some of the bricks would fall out causing a lot of problems for the workers This situation led Turan to consider how to achieve the minimum number of crossings for m kilns and n warehouses It was only after the war in 1952 that he was able to work seriously on this problem 7 Turan was liberated in 1944 after which he was able to return to work at the rabbinical school in Budapest 4 After WWII edit Turan became associate professor at the University of Budapest in 1945 and full professor in 1949 1 5 In the early post war years the streets were patrolled by soldiers On occasion random people were seized and sent to penal camps in Siberia Once such a patrol stopped Turan who was on his way home from university The soldiers questioned the mathematician and then forced him to show them the contents of his briefcase Seeing a reprint of an article from a pre War Soviet magazine among the papers the soldiers immediately let the mathematician go The only thing Turan said about that day in his correspondence with Erdos was that he had come across an extremely interesting way of applying number theory 10 In 1952 he married again the second marriage was to Vera Sos a mathematician They welcomed a son Gyorgy in 1953 a The couple published several papers together 6 As one of his students recalled Turan was a very passionate and active man in the summer he held maths seminars by the pool in between his swimming and rowing training In 1960 he celebrated his 50th birthday and the birth of his third son b by swimming across the Danube 5 Turan was a member of the editorial boards of leading mathematical journals he worked as a visiting professor at many of the top universities in the world He was a member of the Polish American and Austrian Mathematical Societies In 1970 he was invited to serve on the committee of the Fields Prize Turan was also founded and served as the president of the Janos Bolyai Mathematical Society 12 Death edit Around 1970 Turan was diagnosed with leukaemia but the diagnosis was revealed only to his wife Vera Sos She decided not to tell her husband about his illness Only in 1976 she told about it to Pal Erdos Sos was sure that Turan was too much in love with life and would have fallen into despair at the news of his fatal illness and would not have been able to work properly However as Erdos parried Turan did not lose his spirit even in the Nazi camps and came up with his brilliant theories there Erdos deeply regretted that Turan had been kept unaware of his illness because he had put off certain works and books for later hoping that he would soon feel better and in the end was never able to finish them Turan died in Budapest on 26 September 1976 of leukemia aged 66 13 8 Work editTuran worked primarily in number theory 13 4 but also did much work in analysis and graph theory 14 Number theory edit In 1934 Turan used the Turan sieve to give a new and very simple proof of a 1917 result of G H Hardy and Ramanujan on the normal order of the number of distinct prime divisors of a number n namely that it is very close to ln ln n displaystyle ln ln n nbsp In probabilistic terms he estimated the variance from ln ln n displaystyle ln ln n nbsp Halasz says Its true significance lies in the fact that it was the starting point of probabilistic number theory 15 16 The Turan Kubilius inequality is a generalization of this work 13 5 15 16 Turan was very interested in the distribution of primes in arithmetic progressions and he coined the term prime number race for irregularities in the distribution of prime numbers among residue classes 13 5 With his coauthor Knapowski he proved results concerning Chebyshev s bias The Erdos Turan conjecture makes a statement about primes in arithmetic progression Much of Turan s number theory work dealt with the Riemann hypothesis and he developed the power sum method see below to help with this Erdos said Turan was an unbeliever in fact a pagan he did not believe in the truth of Riemann s hypothesis Analysis edit Much of Turan s work in analysis was tied to his number theory work Outside of this he proved Turan s inequalities relating the values of the Legendre polynomials for different indices and together with Paul Erdos the Erdos Turan equidistribution inequality Graph theory edit Erdos wrote of Turan In 1940 1941 he created the area of extremal problems in graph theory which is now one of the fastest growing subjects in combinatorics The field is known more briefly today as extremal graph theory Turan s best known result in this area is Turan s graph theorem that gives an upper bound on the number of edges in a graph that does not contain the complete graph Kr as a subgraph He invented the Turan graph a generalization of the complete bipartite graph to prove his theorem He is also known for the Kovari Sos Turan theorem bounding the number of edges that can exist in a bipartite graph with certain forbidden subgraphs and for raising Turan s brick factory problem namely of determining the crossing number of a complete bipartite graph Power sum method edit Turan developed the power sum method to work on the Riemann hypothesis 15 9 14 The method deals with inequalities giving lower bounds for sums of the form max n m 1 m n j 1 n b j z j n displaystyle max nu m 1 dots m n left sum j 1 n b j z j nu right nbsp hence the name power sum 16 319 Aside from its applications in analytic number theory it has been used in complex analysis numerical analysis differential equations transcendental number theory and estimating the number of zeroes of a function in a disk 16 320 Publications editEd by P Turan 1970 Number Theory Amsterdam North Holland Pub Co ISBN 978 0 7204 2037 1 Paul Turan 1984 On a New Method of Analysis and Its Applications New York Wiley Interscience ISBN 978 0 471 89255 7 Deals with the power sum method 17 Paul Erdos ed 1990 Collected Papers of Paul Turan Budapest Akademiai Kiado ISBN 978 963 05 4298 2 18 Honors editHungarian Academy of Sciences elected corresponding member in 1948 and ordinary member in 1953 Kossuth Prize in 1948 and 1952 Tibor Szele Prize of Janos Bolyai Mathematical Society 1975Notes edit Later professor of mathematics at University of Illinois Chicago Tamas Turan became a philosopher and scholar of the Hebrew language 11 a b c d Alpar 1981 p 271 Magyar Eletrajzi Lexikon Turan Pal in Hungarian Magyar Elektronikus Konyvtar Hungarian Electronic Library Retrieved 21 June 2008 Erdos 1998 p 2 a b c d Paul Turan in Russian School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews Scotland Retrieved 2022 04 26 a b c d Szusz 1980 p 11 a b Babai Laszlo 2001 In and Out of Hungary Paul Erdos His Friends and Times University of Chicago Archived from the original PostScript on 2007 02 07 Retrieved 22 June 2008 a b c Turan 1977 p 7 P Turan A note of welcome Journal of Graph Theory 1 1977 pp 7 9 Turan 1977 p 8 Mathematical Graffiti 1 Pal Turan e la Siberia evitata in Italian MaddMaths Retrieved 2022 04 26 Tamas Turan Hungarian Academy of Sciences Center for Jewish Studies of the Institute for Minority Studies Alpar 1981 p 271 271 a b c d Erdos Paul 1980 Some personal reminiscences of the mathematical work of Paul Turan PDF Acta Arithmetica 37 3 8 doi 10 4064 aa 37 1 3 8 ISSN 0065 1036 Retrieved 22 June 2008 See the death notice publication list and appreciations by Jozsef Szabados analysis and approximation theory by Pal Erdos and Mihaly Szalay number theory and by Miklos Simonovits graphy theory in Matematikai Lapok 25 1974 pages 211 250 http real j mtak hu 9373 1 MTA MatematikaiLapok 1974 pdf although mostly Hungarian much of the mathematics is easily understood and many of the citations are to English articles Retrieved 10 April 2022 a b c Halasz G 1980 The number theoretic work of Paul Turan Acta Arithmetica 37 9 19 doi 10 4064 aa 37 1 9 19 ISSN 0065 1036 a b Tijdeman R April 1986 Book reviews On a new method of analysis and its applications PDF Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society Providence RI American Mathematical Society 14 2 318 22 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 1986 15456 X Retrieved 22 June 2008 Tijdeman Robert 1986 Review On a new method of analysis and its applications by Paul Turan Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society New Series 14 2 318 322 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 1986 15456 X Vaughan R C 1991 Review of Collected Papers of Paul Turan Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 23 2 193 197 doi 10 1112 blms 23 2 193 Sources editHersch Reuben 1993 A Visit to Hungarian Mathematics The Mathematical Intelligencer 15 2 13 26 doi 10 1007 BF03024187 S2CID 122827181 Szusz P 1980 P Turan Reminiscences of his student Journal of Approximation Theory 29 1 11 12 doi 10 1016 0021 9045 80 90135 5 Turan Paul 1977 A note of welcome Journal of Graph Theory 1 7 9 doi 10 1002 jgt 3190010105 Erdos Paul 1998 Some Notes on Turin s Mathematical Work PDF Journal of Approximation Theory 29 1 2 6 doi 10 1016 0021 9045 80 90133 1 Alpar L 1981 In memory of Paul Turan Journal of Number Theory Academic Press 13 3 271 doi 10 1016 0022 314X 81 90012 3 Erdos Paul 1980 Some notes on Turan s mathematical work PDF Journal of Approximation Theory 29 1 2 6 doi 10 1016 0021 9045 80 90133 1 Retrieved 22 June 2008 External links edit nbsp Media related to Pal Turan at Wikimedia Commons O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Paul Turan MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Paul Turan memorial lectures at the Renyi Institute Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pal Turan amp oldid 1173895552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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