Kurt Otto Friedrichs


Quick Info

Born
28 September 1901
Kiel, Germany
Died
31 December 1982
New Rochelle, New York, USA

Summary
Kurt Friedrichs was a German American mathematician who worked on many aspects of partial differential equations. He was the co-founder of the Courant Institute.

Biography

Kurt Friedrichs was known as Kurt when he was young but in later life he decided that he disliked the name Kurt because it sounded sharp and he was called Frieder. His parents were Karl Friedrichs, who was a lawyer and expert on Civil Service law, and Elisabeth Entel from Silesia. Friedrichs mother was [6]:-
... an exceptionally lovely woman whom the boy Friedrichs adored ...
while his father was:-
... maddeningly fussy in small matters ... but superb and very wise in the big things ...
Kurt Otto was the middle of his parents three children, having an older sister and a younger brother. He was a timid, very shy, child and this was made worse by heath problems such as asthma which prevented him mixing normally with other children. His problem with asthma lessened as he grew older but always troubled him to some extent.

The Friedrichs family were long established in Schleswig-Holstein, and Kurt was born in its capital Kiel. However the family moved when he was very young and by the time he reached school age they had settled in Dusseldorf. Kurt's father became friendly with a fellow lawyer in Dusseldorf who was the brother of Felix Klein. This friendship would play a role in Kurt's future. He attended the Realgymnasium in Dusseldorf, solving while there a problem in relativity, then entered the University of Dusseldorf. It was the custom that German students at this time spent periods in several different universities during their degree course. Friedrichs followed this custom and spent a term in Greifswald, a year in Freiburg, and a term in the Austrian university of Graz. In Freiburg he studied philosophy, particularly that of Husseri and Heidegger, and he would retain this interest throughout his life. He was also interested in mathematical physics which he studied at these universities. In 1922 he decided to go the Göttingen to complete his studies, and set out with a letter of introduction from Felix Klein's lawyer brother. He first met Klein on 25 June 1922, one day after the assassination of the Foreign Minister, Walter Rathenau. He described the meeting in detail in an interview in 1982, see [7], where Friedrichs describes Klein as having "grace and charm" yet being upset by the political events of the previous day.

Life at Göttingen was quite difficult. Friedrichs lived in a former prisoner-of-war camp and, like the other students, found that conditions due to the high inflation were so bad that students scarcely had enough to eat. Yet the quality of the lecturers was remarkable, and Friedrichs was amazed at the broad mathematical knowledge of Carl Ludwig Siegel and Emil Artin. He soon made friends with a fellow student who arrived in the same year, namely Hans Lewy, and the two would collaborate on a number of papers. Lewy wrote that, at this time, Friedrichs (see for example [6]):-
... was a very retiring person, not much at ease with himself or the rest of the world. I guess on most people he would have made a negative impression as to his abilities. Oh yes, I was impressed by him; but I was, you see, a student and on the same level with him. But thinking how he would have appeared to a teacher, I think it took keen observation as well as a really intense human interest on Courant's part to see what was there.
Courant had just published a book on function theory with Hurwitz (Hurwitz had died in 1919 but his lectures formed part of the text). Friedrichs read the book and later wrote that the Hurwitz chapters were:-
... very neat, very clear, to the point, you could learn from them ... [but]... the Courant section, the third chapter - when I got hold of that chapter, I started reading one morning, I read morning and night without stopping. It was the most breathtaking book I have ever read in mathematics.
His first publication appeared in 1927 on Einstein's general covariance postulate, and his next, in the same year, was his doctoral dissertation Die Randwert-und Eigenwertprobleme aus der Theorie der elastischen Platten on the theory of elastic plates. He had written his thesis under Courant's supervision and he then became Courant's assistant for two years helping with the Courant-Hilbert book. He collaborated with Lewy on linear hyperbolic partial differential equations and they wrote a joint paper in 1927, and another joint paper, with Courant and Lewy, considered the stability of difference schemes for partial differential equations.

Friedrichs went to Aachen in 1929 to take up a position as assistant to Theodore von Kármán. It was Courant who had set this up and leaving Göttingen was difficult for Friedrichs. Lewy said:-
Courant forced him out into what at the time were unpleasant situations. I remember saying goodbye to Friedrichs at the station when he left for Aachen, and he was in a daze and very unhappy. He was a man, you see, who wouldn't want to change, ... . I think if it had not been for Courant he would have become a gymnasium teacher.
In 1929 Friedrichs returned to Göttingen and presented his habilitation thesis there. He was now interested in operators on Hilbert spaces and applied these tools to initial value problem for hyperbolic equations. See [3] where Friedrichs describes meeting with von Neumann, and how von Neumann's ideas influenced his own.

Friedrichs became professor at the Technische Hochschule in Braunschweig in 1931. He said about this time (see for example [6]:-
A tremendous teaching load, many hours, and I had never taught the courses before so I had to work from morning to night to prepare them. Yet I have never done scientific work more intensely than during that year. It's a general observation of mine that if you have all the time you want for your scientific research, you just end up consulting a psychiatrist. If you have to fight against obstacles, if you have to fight for your time, you do much better. Unless, of course, it goes too far.
In January 1933 Hitler came to power in Germany. Just days after this Friedrichs met Nellie Bruell, a young Jewish girl, as a ball in Braunschweig. It became increasingly clear that, although Friedrichs was not directly affected by the Nazis laws against Jews, many of his friends and colleagues were directly affected in a very serious way. Lewy had left Germany as soon as Hitler came to power, and soon Courant was dismissed from his post and was forced to emigrate to the United States. Nellie, who was now Friedrichs' girlfriend, was also dismissed from her position as an assistant at the Technische Hochschule. Friedrichs visited Courant in New York in the summer of 1935, officially to work with him on the second volume of Courant-Hilbert, but in fact mainly to see if it might be possible for him to emigrate. Of course obtaining positions in the United States was not easy but Courant said he would do everything he could.

By the time Friedrichs had returned to Braunschweig, the Nazis had passed laws forbidding marriage between Aryans and non-Aryans. Not only could he now not marry Nellie but he was forbidden to see her. They met infrequently in secret at the house of a friend. He began to make plans to emigrate, but he did not tell even his parents so that they could truthfully say that they were unaware of what he was about to do if questioned after he had left. He used a trick to escape, getting a visa to go to Paris to visit his sister who was living there. Nellie did not have the same problems leaving since her father's home was in Lyon and she held a French passport. She also left Germany and went to Lyon to await instructions from Friedrichs.

Friedrichs arrived in New York on 4 March 1937. He had not been allowed to take any money out of Germany but Courant arranged accommodation for him. He said (see [6]):-
So I was his assistant again. I lived in a room near him in New Rochelle.
He sent a letter of resignation to the Technische Hochschule in Braunschweig, but went to Princeton to post it so that his whereabouts in the United States could not be traced (he was still trying to protect his parents). Courant worked hard to find a post for Friedrichs for he certainly did not have the personality to push himself forward. As soon as he was offered a temporary post that summer at New York University he sent for Nellie to join him and after making a trip to Canada to satisfy certain immigration requirements, they were married in the United States. They had five children between 1940 and 1950, Walter, Liska, David, Christopher, and Martin. Lewy said:-
Due to Courant and to Nellie, his wife - and also due to Hitler probably - Friedrichs really blossomed. He became a different person from what he was as a student.
Friedrichs published On certain inequalities and characteristic value problems for analytic functions and for functions of two variables in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society in 1937. He published two papers in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 1939: The finite Stieltjes momentum problem; and The non-linear boundary value problem of the buckled plate. This second paper gives an exact solution to the problem of the behaviour of a thin circular plate after buckling under a uniform edge force applied in the plane of the plate. Also important in his early work at New York University was his collaboration with James J Stoker. For example they published Buckling of the circular plate beyond the critical thrust in 1942 which examines a flat plate subjected to compressive forces at its edges and in its plane. The plate becomes unstable when the compressing forces reach certain critical values, but the forces can be increased considerably beyond this without causing a collapse of the plate.

In 1948 Courant and Friedrichs published the classic work Supersonic Flow and Shock Waves. Bers, reviewing the book, writes:-
The book is written in the clear and vivid style for which the authors are known. Open problems and unresolved difficulties are carefully noted, and the reader is never left in doubt as to whether he is presented with a mathematical theorem or with a conjecture based on physical experience. Numerous excellent drawings, a bibliography of almost 200 titles and a carefully prepared index add to the value of this treatise which is certainly destined to become standard.
Morawetz described the way that the collaboration proceeded:-
One or the other of them would take a section from the manual and rewrite it. If Courant did it, then it went to Friedrichs. And Friedrichs would look at it and grumble that it wasn't sufficiently exact. He would rewrite it, and it would become all "ifs" and "buts". Then Courant would take it and he would mumble and groan that it was much too complicated. Then he would rewrite it. Then Friedrichs would take it back and say it wasn't precise enough. The process went on many, many times for each section. When it came back to Friedrichs, he would put in again some of what he had had before, but not so much. Then the next time Courant wouldn't take out so much. They were both pretty determined about what the end product should be, and they were both quite willing to do an awful lot of work. But I never remember a single session where they both sat down together over the manuscript.
During the 1950s Friedrichs wrote five articles on Mathematical aspects of the quantum theory of fields which eventually became part of his book with the same title. He writes in the introduction that the work is aimed at:-
... mathematicians who are familiar with the fundamental concepts of quantum theory of single particles and who would like to learn which mathematical concepts are involved in the simplest problems of field quantum theory.
He took a rather different approach to the topic in Perturbation of spectra in Hilbert space published in 1965, but based on lectures he gave in 1960 at the Summer Seminar on Applied Mathematics held in Boulder.

Also of interest is the book From Pythagoras to Einstein (1965). Friedrichs writes in the Preface:-
The present book is not addressed to a well defined group of readers. The first chapter is based on a lecture given to a special mathematics class of the sixth grade. The material of the second chapter belongs to elementary algebra; that of the third, fourth and fifth chapters may be studied by students of the twelfth grade. The subject of the sixth and seventh chapters may be accessible to selected high school seniors, but might just as well be read by college seniors. Knowledge of elementary Euclidean geometry is presupposed, and some familiarity with the basic notions of physics will be helpful.
Friedrichs received many honours. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences (United States) in 1959 and to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He received many honorary degrees (Aachen, Uppsala, Braunschweig, Columbia, and New York University), and received many awards, in particular the Applied Mathematics and Numerical Analysis Award of the National Academy, and the National Medal of Science in 1976:-
... for bringing the powers of modern mathematics to bear on problems in physics, fluid dynamics and elasticity.
During the last part of his life he travelled extensively to Israel, Japan, India, Africa, and especially back to his native country of Germany. His health began to deteriorate, however, and in particular he became deaf which made life increasingly isolated.


References (show)

  1. C S Morawetz (ed.), Kurt Otto Friedrichs Selecta Vol. 1 (Birkhäuser Boston, Inc., Boston, MA, 1986).
  2. C S Morawetz (ed.), Kurt Otto Friedrichs Selecta Vol. 2 (Birkhäuser Boston, Inc., Boston, MA, 1986).
  3. K O Friedrichs, von Neumann's Hilbert space theory and partial differential equations, SIAM Rev. 22 (4) (1980), 486-493.
  4. C S Morawetz, Kurt Otto Friedrichs : September 28, 1901 - January 1, 1983, Biographical Memoirs, National Academy of Science 40 (1969), 69-90.
  5. C Reid, K O Friedrichs 1901-1982, The Mathematical Intelligencer 3 (3) (1995), 23-30.
  6. C Reid, The Life of Kurt Otto Friedrichs, in Kurt Otto Friedrichs Selecta Vol. 1 (Birkhäuser Boston, Inc., Boston, MA, 1986).
  7. D E Rowe, The old guard under the new order: Kurt Friedrichs on his meeting with Felix Klein, Math. Intelligencer 6 (2) (1984), 74-76.

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Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update August 2005