Mikhail Yakovlevich Suslin
Mikhail Yakovlevich Suslin (Russian: Михаи́л Я́ковлевич Су́слин; Krasavka, Saratov Oblast, November 15, 1894 – 21 October 1919, Krasavka) (sometimes transliterated Souslin) was a Russian mathematician who made major contributions to the fields of general topology and descriptive set theory.
His name is especially associated to Suslin's problem, a question relating to totally ordered sets that was eventually found to be independent of the standard system of set-theoretic axioms, ZFC.
He contributed greatly to the theory of analytic sets, sometimes called after him, a kind of a set of reals which is definable via trees. In fact, while he was a research student of Nikolai Luzin (in 1917) he found an error in an argument of Lebesgue, who believed he had proved that for any Borel set in , the projection onto the real axis was also a Borel set.
Suslin died of typhus in the 1919 Moscow epidemic following the Russian Civil War.
Publications
Suslin only published one paper during his life: a 4-page note.
- Souslin, M. Ya. (1917), "Sur un définition des ensembles measurables B sans nombres transfinis", C.R. Acad. Sci. Paris, 164: 88–91
- Souslin, M. (1920), "Problème 3" (PDF), Fundamenta Mathematicae, 1: 223
- Souslin, M. Ya. (1923), Kuratowski, C., ed., "Sur un corps dénombrable de nombres réels", Fundamenta math. (in French), 4: 311–315, JFM 49.0147.03
See also
References
- Igoshin, V. I. (1996), "A short biography of Mikhail Yakovlevich Suslin", Russ. Math. Surv., 51 (3): 371–383, doi:10.1070/RM1996v051n03ABEH002905
- Akihiro Kanamori, Tenenbaum and Set theory (PDF), p. 2
- Mikhail Yakovlevich Suslin at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Mikhail Yakovlevich Suslin", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews.