Gösta Mittag-Leffler
Gösta Mittag-Leffler (March 16th 1846 - July 7th 1927) is a mathematician Swedish. Still young student, it goes to Paris (1873) to follow the courses of Charles Hermite whose notoriety is large. But this last modestly advises those of to him Weierstrass to Berlin. It is near the latter that it will establish its more important work in complex analysis and on the series of functions. Continuing work of Liouville, an important theorem of decomposition of the functions méromorphes bears its name.
It creates in 1882 the review Acta Mathematica where the large mathematicians of the time like Cantor or Kovalesky will publish. It is thanks to Mittag-Leffler and Weierstrass that Sonia Kovalesky could be made known and, in particular, to obtain a pulpit of mathematics at the founded university of Stockholm in 1878 and where Mittag-Leffler was one of the first to be taught.
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