Joseph Bishop Keller


Quick Info

Born
31 July 1923
Paterson, New Jersey, USA
Died
7 September 2016
Palo Alto, California, USA

Summary
Joseph Keller was an American mathematician who originated the Geometrical Theory of Diffraction to solve problems of wave propagation.

Biography

Joseph Keller was the son of Isaac Keller and Sally Bishop. He attended East Side High School in Paterson, New Jersey, where he was taught mathematics by several excellent teachers. After graduating from the High School, he entered New York University intending to major in mathematics. During his first year of study he took both mathematics and physics courses and enjoyed physics so much that he decided to change to major in physics. However he majored in both mathematics and physics for his B.A. which he received in 1943. He, along with a friend [3]:-
... attended Courant's initial lecture on 'Methods of Mathematical Physics'. At the end of the lecture we went up and told him we were undergraduate students, and we asked, "Can we sit in on this course?" He said, "No, it's absolutely not allowed. However, if you sit in the front row there, maybe I won't see you. But just because I can't see you doesn't mean you can't ask questions." So we did attend the course, and obviously that was what he wanted, but he told us in that funny way to make evident the foolishness of the university rules.
After graduating, Keller was appointed as an Instructor in Physics at Princeton in July 1943. Of course, 1943 was in the middle of World War II, so in 1943-44 Keller taught courses at Princeton put on to train engineers serving in the military. He attended graduate mathematics and physics courses given by a number of eminent mathematicians, for example Solomon Lefschetz, Albert Tucker, Alonzo Church, Frederic Bohnenblust, Claude Chevalley and Wolfgang Pauli.

After Keller had been at Princeton for a few months the training courses for engineers were discontinued since it was realised that the war would be over before these men had completed their training. His position at Princeton ended in February 1944 and Keller then had to find another role in which to serve. The American Institute of Physics sent him to Columbia University where he became a research assistant in March 1944. In New York, he worked for the Office of Scientific Research and Development of the Division of War Research. His office was in the Empire State Building and the work involved submarine detection [3]:-
We worked there on the following kind of question: How much sound is reflected back from a submarine? ... The problem was to calculate how the waves traveled through the water, spread out, became weaker, hit the object, and then how much was scattered back, and what the strength of the signal would be when it got back to the receiving sonar. We wanted to know, for example, at what range would it be possible to detect a submarine, and what was the best frequency to use? The projector sent out a beam, and the beam spread out, and if you didn't detect anything, then you would change direction and do it again. How much should you move each time, through what angle? How long should you wait for the signal to come back? How deep is the submarine, and should you look down and up?
Not only did he work on theoretical aspects of the research but he was also involved in practical experiments at a laboratory in Mountain Lakes, New Jersey. When the war ended, Keller returned to his academic studies in October 1945 but his research continued to be closely linked to the work he had been carrying out for the Division of War Research. He was awarded an M.S. by New York University in 1946 and continued to work towards his doctorate supervised by Henry Primakoff. However, Primakoff was appointed to Washington University, St Louis in 1946 and so for the final part of Keller's research he was nominally advised by Richard Courant. Keller was awarded a Ph.D. in 1948 for his thesis Reflection and Transmission of Electromagnetic Waves by Thin Curved Shells.

A number of Keller's publications had appeared in print before the award of his doctorate. The paper Diffraction of sound around a circular disk (1947) was written jointly with Henry Primakoff, Martin Klein and E L Carstensen. Another paper Reflection and transmission of sound by thin curved shells (1947) was a joint work of Keller with his research advisor Henry Primakoff. Albert Heins writes:-
The authors discuss the reflection and transmission properties of thin curved shells by sound waves. First an inhomogeneous integral equation is derived for the sound field in an infinite medium containing a thin curved shell of different material. By appropriate approximations, the solution of the integral equation is reduced to the evaluation of a surface integral. This surface integral is similar to one obtained from the usual Kirchhoff diffraction theory. The integral is evaluated approximately and provides a basis for calculating the various physical parameters.
In 1948 Keller published a paper Reflection and transmission of sound by a spherical shell written jointly with his younger brother Herbert Keller. Albert Heins writes:-
A periodic point source is at the center of a sphere. This sphere is surrounded by a second sphere of different density and radius. The authors solve the problem of finding the reflection and transmission of sound in these three media (i.e., inside the first sphere, the spherical shell and exterior to the second sphere). All of these regions have different radii and densities. ...
Keller's first two single-author papers appeared in 1948: On the solution of the Boltzmann equation for rarefied gases; and The solitary wave and periodic waves in shallow water.

Richard Courant started the task of building up what is now named the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University in 1935. Then it was the Department of Mathematics but it was renamed the Institute for Mathematics and Mechanics in 1946. Projects begun at this time led to the setting up of the Institute's Division of Wave Propagation and Applied Mathematics. Keller was appointed as an Assistant in the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences in 1948. He was promoted, first to Associate Professor of Mathematics, and then to Full Professor of Mathematics. He served as Director of the Division of Wave Propagation and Applied Mathematics from 1967 to 1979. He was also Chairman of the Department of Mathematics, University College, School of Engineering and Science, and the Graduate School of Engineering and Science, New York University from 1967 to 1973. On 29 August 1963, Keller married Evelyn Fox; they had two children Jeffrey M Keller and Sarah N Keller. The Kellers were divorced on 17 November 1976.

While holding his chair at New York University, Keller spent time at Stanford University, being Visiting Professor of Mathematics there in 1969-1970 and again in 1976-1978. In 1978 he accepted the position of Lewis M Terman Professor of Mathematics and Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University, a role he continued to hold until 1993 when he became Professor Emeritus. He has been a research associate at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute since 1969. He was also an Honorary Professor of Mathematical Sciences at the University of Cambridge during 1989-93.

Keller has made deep and important contributions to a wide range of areas of applied mathematics [4]:-
Keller originated the Geometrical Theory of Diffraction to solve problems of wave propagation. The theory is an indispensable tool for engineers and scientists working on radar, the design of antennas and on high frequency systems in complicated environments. He also formulated methods to solve the problems of wave propagation through heterogeneous, turbulent, or random media in which fluctuations occur due to the irregular and fluctuating properties of the medium. Keller has worked extensively on problems related to national security, including sonar, underwater explosions, atmospheric explosions of hydrogen bombs, and A-bomb explosions on ships and submarines.
His achievements have been as a researcher and also an as expositor, and he has been honoured throughout his career for both. In fact the first major awards he received were for his outstanding writing. In 1976, jointly with David W McLaughlin, he received the Lester R Ford Award of the Mathematical Association of America which recognises authors of articles of expository excellence published in The American Mathematical Monthly or Mathematics Magazine. The paper for which the prize was awarded was The Feynman integral (1975):-
The authors give an elementary introduction to the Feynman integral and some of its physical applications. In particular, they present the definition of the integral given by E Nelson (1964), and show that the integral does satisfy the corresponding appropriate Schrödinger equation.
In the following year Keller again received the Lester R Ford Award, this time for his paper Inverse problems (1976). Clarence Ablow writes in a review:-
Two problems are inverses if the formulation of each involves all or part of the solution of the other. The direct problem of the pair has been extensively studied or has a solution readily obtained by standard methods. The author presents numerous examples from everyday discourse as well as more technical questions from potential and scattering theory to show that inverse problems are frequently presented as questions of data reduction. They can have no or only partly determined solutions even though the corresponding direct problems are well posed.
The American Mathematical Society honoured Keller by choosing him to be their Gibbs Lecturer in 1977, and the Society of Industrial and Applied Mechanics honoured him as their von Neumann Lecturer in 1983. He has won major awards such as the von Karman Prize from the Society of Industrial and Applied Mathematics in 1979, the Eringen Medal from the Society of Engineering Sciences in 1981, the Timoshenko Medal from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in 1984, and the National Medal of Science in 1988. In 1995 he received the National Academy of Sciences Award in Applied Mathematics and Numerical Analysis. The citation states that Keller was given the awarded Award:-
... for his seminal contributions to applied mathematics, with special reference to his geometrical theory of diffraction and his work on water-wave propagation.
In 1996 the Frederic Esser Nemmers Prize in Mathematics from Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, was given to Keller who:-
... is regarded by many as the world's most distinguished applied mathematician.
He received the Wolf Prize in Mathematics (shared with Yakov G Sinai) in 1997:-
... his profound and innovative contributions, in particular to electromagnetic, optical, acoustic wave propagation and to fluid, solid, quantum and statistical mechanics.
The article [5] announcing the award of the Wolf Prize gives an overview of his contributions:-
Keller is a pre-eminent applied mathematician in the classical tradition. He has brought a deep understanding of physics and a superb skill at asymptotics to an astonishing range of problems. These include reflection, scattering, and diffraction of waves, whether acoustic, electromagnetic, elastic, or fluid. His outstanding contributions cover problems in mechanics, quantum mechanics, thermodynamics, and statistical mechanics, and include the so-called Keller-Maslov index, the Keller-Rubinov formula for forward scattering, and pioneering work on random media. He is really the model of what a mathematician interested in a wide variety of physical phenomena can and should be.
In 2007 the International Congress on Industrial and Applied Mathematics awarded its Lagrange Prize to Keller. His:-
... profound contributions to applied mathematics have had great impact in science and engineering as well as in pure mathematics. He developed the geometrical theory of diffraction that provided the first systematic description of wave propagation around edges and corners of an obstacle. It has been widely used for radar reflection from targets, elastic wave scattering from defects in solids, acoustic wave propagation in the ocean radar, and many other fields. It also served as a starting point for development of the modern theory of linear partial differential equations
The article [1] (from which the citation is quoted) continues:-
Other areas in which he has contributed include singular perturbation theory, bifurcation studies in partial differential equations, nonlinear geometrical optics and acoustics, inverse scattering, effective equations for composite media, biophysics, biomechanics, carcinogenesis, optimal design, hydrodynamic surface waves, transport theory, and waves in random media.
Keller twice won an Ig Nobel Prize; in 1999 for calculating how to make a teapot spout that does not drip, and in 2012 for analysing the motion of a runner's ponytail.

Finally let us note that Keller gave as his hobbies hiking and skiing.


References (show)

  1. 2007 ICIAM Prizes Announced, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 53 (11) (2006), 1358.
  2. Biographical sketch of Joseph B Keller, in A celebration of mathematical modeling (Kluwer Acad. Publ., Dordrecht, 2004), xi.
  3. A Jackson, Interview with Joseph Keller, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 51 (7) (2004), 751-760.
  4. Joseph B Keller: Recipient, 1996 Frederic Esser Nemmers Prize in Mathematics (Northwestern University)
  5. Keller and Sinai Receive 1997 Wolf Prize, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 44 (3) (1997), 351-352.
  6. NAS Prizes Awarded, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 42 (5) (1995), 573.
  7. Publications of Joseph B. Keller, in A celebration of mathematical modeling (Kluwer Acad. Publ., Dordrecht, 2004), xiii-xxxvii.

Additional Resources (show)

Other pages about Joseph Keller:

  1. Stanford obituary

Honours (show)


Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update February 2010