Ronald Graham
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Ronald Graham
Summary
Ronald Graham is a human[1]. His place of birth was Taft[2]. He was born on October 31, 1935[3]. He died in La Jolla[4]. He died on July 6, 2020[5]. He worked as a mathematician[6], juggler[7], computer scientist[8], researcher[9], and university teacher[10]. He ranks in the top 0.72% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (578 views/month, #7,155 of 1,000,298).[11]
Key Facts
- Ronald Graham was born in Taft[2].
- Ronald Graham died in La Jolla[4].
- Ronald Graham was born on October 31, 1935[3].
- Ronald Graham died on July 6, 2020[5].
- Among Ronald Graham's spouses was Fan Chung[12].
- Ronald Graham held citizenship in United States[13].
- Ronald Graham's professions included mathematician[6].
- Ronald Graham worked as a juggler[7].
- Ronald Graham worked as a computer scientist[8].
- Ronald Graham's professions included researcher[9].
- Ronald Graham worked as a university teacher[10].
- Ronald Graham's field of work was combinatorics[14].
- Ronald Graham's field of work was graph theory[15].
- Ronald Graham's field of work was mathematics[16].
- Among Ronald Graham's employers was University of California, San Diego[17].
- Ronald Graham was employed by Bell Labs[18].
- Ronald Graham was employed by California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology[19].
- Ronald Graham was educated at University of California, Berkeley[20].
- Ronald Graham's doctoral advisor was Derrick Henry Lehmer[21].
- Ronald Graham received the Euler Medal[22].
- Ronald Graham received the Euler Book Prize[23].
- Ronald Graham received the Josiah Willard Gibbs Lectureship[24].
- Ronald Graham received the ACM Fellow[25].
- Ronald Graham received the Fellow of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics[26].
- Ronald Graham received the Fellow of the American Mathematical Society[27].
Body
Origins and Family
Ronald Graham was born in Taft[2]. He was born on October 31, 1935[3].
Education
Ronald Graham's education included a stint at University of California, Berkeley[20]. His doctoral advisor was Derrick Henry Lehmer[21].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include mathematician[6], juggler[7], computer scientist[8], researcher[9], and university teacher[10]. Fields of work include combinatorics[14], a branch of mathematics[28]; graph theory[15], an academic discipline[29]; and mathematics[16], an academic discipline[30]. Employers include University of California, San Diego[17], a public university[31], in United States[32], founded in 1960[33]; Bell Labs[18], a privately held company[34], in United States[35], founded in 1925[36], headquartered in Murray Hill[37]; and California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology[19], an institute[38], in United States[39], founded in 2005[40]. Doctoral students include Glenn Howland Hurlbert[41]; Bharti P. Temkin[42]; Joshua N. Cooper[43], a professor of mathematics[44], of United States[45]; David Jacob Wildstrom[46]; Jia Mao[47]; and Nan Zang[48].
Recognition
Awards received include Euler Medal[22], a science award[49], in Internationality[50], founded in 1993[51]; Euler Book Prize[23], a science award[52]; Josiah Willard Gibbs Lectureship[24], an award[53], in United States[54], founded in 1923[55]; ACM Fellow[25], a fellowship award[56]; Fellow of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics[26], a fellowship award[57]; and Fellow of the American Mathematical Society[27], a fellowship award[58].
Personal Life
Ronald Graham was married to Fan Chung[12].
Death and Burial
Ronald Graham died on July 6, 2020[5]. He died in La Jolla[4].
Works and Contributions
Things named for Ronald Graham include Graham's number[59], a positive integer[60]; Graham scan[61], a convex hull algorithm[62]; and Erdős–Graham problem[63].
Why It Matters
Ronald Graham ranks in the top 0.72% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (578 views/month, #7,155 of 1,000,298).[11] He has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[64] He is known by 23 alternative names across languages and contexts.[65]
He is credited with the discovery of Boolean Pythagorean triples problem[66], a mathematical problem[67]. Works attributed to him include Concrete Mathematics[68], a written work[69]. Entities named for him include Graham's number[59], a positive integer[60]; Graham scan[61], a convex hull algorithm[62]; and Erdős–Graham problem[63].
His notable doctoral advisees include Jia Mao[70], a mathematician[71] and Nan Zang[72], a computer scientist[73].
FAQs
Where was Ronald Graham born?
Ronald Graham was born in Taft[2].
Where did Ronald Graham die?
Ronald Graham passed away in La Jolla[4].
Who was Ronald Graham married to?
Ronald Graham's spouses include Fan Chung[12].
What did Ronald Graham do for work?
Ronald Graham worked as mathematician[6], juggler[7], computer scientist[8], researcher[9], and university teacher[10].
Where did Ronald Graham go to school?
Ronald Graham was educated at University of California, Berkeley[20].
What awards did Ronald Graham receive?
Honors received include Euler Medal[22], Euler Book Prize[23], Josiah Willard Gibbs Lectureship[24], and ACM Fellow[25].
What did Ronald Graham discover?
Ronald Graham is credited as discoverer of Boolean Pythagorean triples problem[66].