Paul Lévy
Paul Pierre Lévy
Born(1886-09-15)15 September 1886
Died15 December 1971(1971-12-15) (aged 85)
EducationUniversity of Paris
Known forAdditive process
Brownian excursion
Concentration of measure
Martingale (probability theory)
Universal chord theorem
Lévy alpha-stable distribution
Lévy's arcsine law
Lévy C curve
Lévy's constant
Lévy characterisation
Lévy's continuity theorem
Lévy distribution
Lévy flight
Lévy's local time
Lévy measure
Lévy's modulus of continuity theorem
Lévy process
Lévy's zero–one law
Lévy–Khintchine representation
Lévy–Prokhorov metric
Lévy–Steinitz theorem
Lindeberg–Lévy CLT
Wiener–Lévy theorem
AwardsÉmile Picard Medal of the French Academy of Sciences (1953)[1]
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsÉcole Polytechnique
École des Mines
Jacques Hadamard
Vito Volterra
Doctoral students
Wolfgang Doeblin
Michel Loève
Benoît Mandelbrot
Georges Matheron

Paul Pierre Lévy (French pronunciation: [pɔl pjɛʁ levi]; 15 September 1886 – 15 December 1971)[2] was a French mathematician who was active especially in probability theory, introducing fundamental concepts such as local time, stable distributions and characteristic functions. Lévy processes, Lévy flights, Lévy measures, Lévy's constant, the Lévy distribution, the Lévy area, the Lévy arcsine law, and the fractal Lévy C curve are named after him.

Biography

edit

Lévy was born in Paris to a Jewish family which already included several mathematicians.[3] His father Lucien Lévy was an examiner at the École Polytechnique. Lévy attended the École Polytechnique and published his first paper in 1905, at the age of nineteen, while still an undergraduate, in which he introduced the Lévy–Steinitz theorem. His teacher and advisor was Jacques Hadamard. After graduation, he spent a year in military service and then studied for three years at the École des Mines, where he became a professor in 1913.[2]

During World War I Lévy conducted mathematical analysis work for the French Artillery. In 1920 he was appointed Professor of Analysis at the École Polytechnique, where his students included Benoît Mandelbrot and Georges Matheron.

After the German invasion and occupation of France in June 1940, the Nazis moved the École Polytechnique to Lyon, and Lévy moved to Lyon to continue teaching. On 3 October 1940 the Vichy government enacted a law that required all Jewish faculty be fired. Lévy received his termination notice 19 December 1940, but the director of the École Polytechnique got Lévy reinstated by 14 March 1941. Increasing Nazi oppression prompted Lévy to flee Lyon and go live in hiding with his son-in-law Robert Piron, in Montbonnot, just one week before the German invasion of Vichy France on 11 November, 1942. In hiding until the Allied liberation of France, Lévy continued his mathematics work. After the war, Lévy returned to the École Polytechnique in Paris and remained there until his retirement in 1959.[4][2]

Lévy made many fundamental contributions to probability theory and the nascent theory of stochastic processes. He introduced the notion of 'stable distribution' which share the property of stability under addition of independent variables and proved a general version of the Central Limit theorem, recorded in his 1937 book Théorie de l'addition des variables aléatoires, using the notion of characteristic function. He also introduced, independently from Aleksandr Khinchin, the notion of infinitely divisible law and derived their characterization through the Lévy–Khintchine representation.

His 1948 monograph on Brownian motion, Processus stochastiques et mouvement brownien, contains a wealth of new concepts and results, including the Lévy area, the Lévy arcsine law, the local time of a Brownian path, and many other results.

Lévy received a number of honours, including membership at the French Academy of Sciences and honorary membership at the London Mathematical Society.

Personal life

edit

In 1913 Lévy married Suzanne Lévy (1892-1973). Her maternal grandfather was philologist Henri Weil. The couple had three children, Marie-Hélène in 1913, Denise in 1916 and Jean Claude in 1918. Marie-Hélène Schwartz and her husband Laurent Schwartz were also notable mathematicians.[5] Denise married Robert Piron, an engineer, and worked as a professor of German at the lycée Molière. Jean Claude became a naval engineer.[6]

Works

edit
  • 1922 – Leçons d'analyse Fonctionnelle
  • 1925 – Calcul des probabilités
  • 1937 – Théorie de l'addition des variables aléatoires
  • 1948 – Processus stochastiques et mouvement brownien
  • 1954 – Le mouvement brownien

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Médaille Émile Picard" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-10-14. Retrieved 2018-08-07.
  2. ^ a b c O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Paul Lévy (mathematician)", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  3. ^ Barbut, Marc; Locker, Bernard; Mazliak, Laurent (2013). Paul Lévy and Maurice Fréchet: 50 Years of Correspondence in 107 Letters. p. xii. ISBN 978-1-4471-5618-5.
  4. ^ Edmund Robertson; John O'Connor. "Paul Pierre Lévy". MacTutor Mathematician Biographies. University of St Andrews, Scotland. Retrieved 17 April 2026.
  5. ^ Kosmann-Schwarzbach, Yvette (2015), "Women mathematicians in France in the mid-twentieth century", BSHM Bulletin: Journal of the British Society for the History of Mathematics, 30 (3): 227–242, arXiv:1502.07597, doi:10.1080/17498430.2014.976804, S2CID 119148294.
  6. ^ "Paul Lévy - Biography". Maths History. Retrieved 2026-06-07.
edit

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Lévy's modulus of continuity theorem

Wiener process Lévy, P. Author Profile Théorie de l’addition des variables aléatoires. 2. éd. (French) page 172 Zbl 0056.35903 (Monographies des probabilités

Central limit theorem

Paul (1937). Theorie de l'addition des variables aleatoires [Combination theory of unpredictable variables] (in French). Paris: Gauthier-Villars. Gnedenko

Stable distribution

Paul (1937). Theorie de l'addition des variables aleatoires [Combination theory of unpredictable variables]. Paris: Gauthier-Villars. Gnedenko, Boris

Michel Ledoux

the University of Strasbourg with thesis Propriétés limites des variables aléatoires vectorielles which was made under the supervision of Xavier Fernique

Georges Matheron

entre variables aléatoires lognormales of 29 November 1954 was marked Note statistisque No 2. In this paper, Matheron explored lognormal variables and set

Sub-Gaussian distribution

Fourier aléatoires". Studia Mathematica. 19: 1–25. doi:10.4064/sm-19-1-1-25. Buldygin, V. V.; Kozachenko, Yu. V. (1980). "Sub-Gaussian random variables". Ukrainian

Yomtov Garti

Y, Consoli T. 1954. Sur la densite de probabilite du produit de variables aleatoires de Pearson du type III. In: Studies in mathematics and mechanics

Lévy's constant

[Reference given in Dover book] P. Levy, Théorie de l'addition des variables aléatoires, Paris, 1937, p. 320. Ergodic Theory with Applications to Continued