Paul Nevai
0 sources
Paul Nevai
Summary
Paul Nevai is a human[1]. He worked as a mathematician[2].
Key Facts
- Paul Nevai worked as a mathematician[2].
- Paul Nevai was educated at Hungarian Academy of Sciences[3].
- Paul Nevai's doctoral advisor was Géza Freud[4].
- Paul Nevai's doctoral advisor was Béla Szőkefalvi-Nagy[5].
- Paul Nevai's doctoral advisor was Pál Turán[6].
- Paul Nevai is recorded as male[7].
- Paul Nevai's instance of is recorded as human[8].
- Paul Nevai supervised Tamás Erdélyi as a doctoral student[9].
- Paul Nevai supervised Hrushikesh Narhar Mhaskar as a doctoral student[10].
- Paul Nevai supervised Haewon Joung as a doctoral student[11].
- Paul Nevai supervised Jianxiang Zhang as a doctoral student[12].
- Paul Nevai supervised Ferenc Janos Pinter as a doctoral student[13].
- Paul Nevai supervised Shing-Whu Jha as a doctoral student[14].
- Paul Nevai supervised William Charles Bauldry as a doctoral student[15].
- Paul Nevai supervised Rong-Chyu Sheen as a doctoral student[16].
- Paul Nevai supervised Stanford Sage Bonan as a doctoral student[17].
- Paul Nevai's Mathematics Genealogy Project ID is recorded as 11640[18].
- Paul Nevai's family name is recorded as Nevai[19].
- Paul Nevai's given name is recorded as Paul[20].
- Paul Nevai's given name is recorded as Pál[21].
- Paul Nevai's zbMATH author ID is recorded as nevai.paul-g[22].
- Paul Nevai's MR Author ID is recorded as 130635[23].
- Paul Nevai's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as WikiProject Mathematics[24].
Body
Education
Paul Nevai was educated at Hungarian Academy of Sciences[3]. Doctoral advisors include Géza Freud[4], a mathematician[25], 1922–1979[26], of Hungary[27], awarded the Kossuth Prize[28]; Béla Szőkefalvi-Nagy[5], a mathematician[29], 1913–1998[30], of Hungary[31], awarded the Kossuth Prize[32], specialised in mathematical analysis[33]; and Pál Turán[6], a mathematician[34], 1910–1976[35], of Hungary[36], awarded the Kossuth Prize[37], specialised in combinatorics[38].
Career and Affiliations
Paul Nevai worked as a mathematician[2]. Doctoral students include Tamás Erdélyi[9], a mathematician[39], b. 1961[40], of Hungary[41], specialised in mathematics[42]; Hrushikesh Narhar Mhaskar[10], a researcher[43]; Haewon Joung[11]; Jianxiang Zhang[12]; Ferenc Janos Pinter[13]; and Shing-Whu Jha[14].
FAQs
What did Paul Nevai do for work?
Paul Nevai worked as mathematician[2].
Where did Paul Nevai go to school?
Paul Nevai was educated at Hungarian Academy of Sciences[3].