User:Yerevantsi/sandbox/Mergelyan

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Sergey Mergelyan

ru:Мергелян, Сергей Никитович

Sergey Nikitovich Mergelyan
Born(1928-05-19)May 19, 1928
DiedAugust 20, 2008(2008-08-20) (aged 80)
Resting placeNovodevichy Cemetery, Moscow
NationalityArmenian
CitizenshipSoviet Union
Alma materYerevan State University
Steklov Institute of Mathematics
Scientific career
FieldsComplex analysis, approximation theory, potential theory[1]
InstitutionsYerevan State University
Moscow State University
Steklov Institute of Mathematics
Armenian Academy of Sciences
ThesisО наилучших приближениях в комплексной области (On Best Approximations in a Complex Region) (1949)
Doctoral advisorMstislav Keldysh[2][3]
Other academic advisorsArtashes Shahinian[4]
Doctoral studentsAndrey Aleksandrovich Gonchar[5]

Sergey Nikitovich Mergelyan (Russian: Сергей Никитович Мергелян; Armenian: Սերգեյ Նիկիտի Մերգելյան; May 19, 1928 – August 20, 2008) was a Soviet Armenian mathematician.[6]

Mergelyan's theorem

A child prodigy, Mergelyan graduated from Yerevan State University (YSU) at 19 and received a doctorate from the Steklov Institute of Mathematics at 20, becoming the Soviet Union's youngest Doctor of Science. He taught at YSU and Moscow State University. In 1956 he became the first director of the Yerevan Scientific Research Institute of Mathematical Machines, which became so closely associated with him that it was popularly known as the "Mergelyan Institute." He then mostly divided his time between Yerevan and Moscow until 1986, when he left Armenia, first settling in Moscow, then emigrating to the United States, where he died.

Early life[edit]

He was born Sergey Nikitovich Mergelov[7] on May 19, 1928 in Simferopol, Crimea.[8][2][3] His father, Mkrtich Mergelyan[9][3] (1891–1955),[7] was known by his russified name Nikita Ivanovich Mergelov.[7] He was an Armenian originally from Akhalkalaki, Javakheti (Javakhk).[9][3] He was a private employer[8] specializing in the development of small industrial complexes.[2] His mother, Lyudmyla Ivanovna Vyrodova (1902–1956),[8][7] was the daughter of a bank manager executed by the Bolsheviks in 1918 in Berdyansk.[8][7] Sergey spent his childhood years in Russia and Ukraine and did not speak Armenian.[7] He studied at a secondary school in Kerch, Crimea.[8]

In 1936 Sergey and his parents were sent to Narym, Tomsk Oblast in Siberia by the Soviet authorities, who declared his father a "NEPman" for building and operating a paper mill in Yelets, Lipetsk Oblast.[7] Sergey and his mother were acquitted by a court decision in 1937 and returned to Kerch and successfully petitioned Soviet Prosecutor General Andrey Vyshinsky to release Nikita in 1938.[8][7][2]

In 1941 his family moved to Yerevan, Soviet Armenia during the evacuation of Kerch during World War II, before the advance of the German forces.[2][3] His father was invited to build a cardboard factory in Yerevan.[8][2] Sergey, his parents and maternal grandmother lived in a 20 m2 (220 sq ft) apartment.[8][7] He learned Armenian and began reciting Charents poems.[7]

Education[edit]

Mergelyan was a child prodigy.[10][7] He finished secondary school in Yerevan. At 16, Mergelyan passed the exams to graduate early and immediately enrolled at the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of Yerevan State University in the fall of 1944.[11] His first mentor was Artashes Shahinian, the founder of the Armenian school of mathematics.[8] He finished his university studies in three and a half years instead of five, graduating in 1947.[13] He changed his last name from the russified Mergelov to the original Armenian and received his university degree as Mergelyan.[8][7]

In 1947 he moved to Moscow to continue his studies at the Steklov Institute of Mathematics of the USSR Academy of Sciences under Mstislav Keldysh.[2][3] Keldysh often invited him to his home to discuss mathematics.[8] Mergelyan wrote his thesis[14] for the degree of candidate (kandidat) of physical and mathematical sciences in a year and a half. He defended it in 1949 and was awarded the degree of a doctor of physical and mathematical sciences, the highest scientific degree. All three official opponents: Sergey Nikolsky, Mikhail Lavrentyev and Alexander Gelfand requested the Academic Board, headed by Ivan Vinogradov, to award Mergelyan the doctoral degree instead of the degree of candidate for his outstanding contribution to the approximation theory.[3][8] On February 17, 1949 the Academic Board voted unanimously to award Mergelyan, aged 20, a doctoral degree.[9] Thus, Mergelyan became the youngest Doctor of Science in the Soviet Union.[a]

Sergey Mergelyan was the youngest PhD in the history of the USSR (degree was awarded at the age of 20), the youngest corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences (since 1953, the title was awarded at the age of 24), academician of Armenian Academy of Sciences (since 1956).[8]

Research[edit]

Complex analysis, approximation theory, potential theory[1]

Mergelyan's theorem

S. N. Mergelyan, Uniform approximations to functions of a complex variable (Russian). Uspekhi Mat. Nauk7, no. 2(48) (1952), 31-122; English transl in Amer. Math. Soc. Transl. (1) 3 (1962), 294-391.

http://www.mathnet.ru/php/archive.phtml?wshow=paper&jrnid=rm&paperid=8302&option_lang=eng


Область научных интересов: теория функций комплексного переменного.[12]

Основные труды: «Некоторые вопросы конструктивной теории функций» (1951), «Советская математическая школа» (соавт., 1967).[12]


His area of scientific interests was dealt with the approximate representations of given functions through simpler ones. This problem was first formulated by P. L. Chebyshev and applied to the theory of mechanisms, further it was developed by A. A. Markov (senior) and later by S. N. Bernstein, M. A Lavrentiev and M. V. Keldysh. Nevertheless, in the field of complex numbers the theory of approximations remained still little studied. Mergelyan engaged in research and received a number of brilliant results. In 1951-53 he published several important works: “Some questions of constructive theory of functions,” “Uniform approximations of complex variable functions,” “On the completeness of analytic functions systems” and proposed a solution for the approximation of continuous functions by polynomials. The level and importance of his works could also be assessed by the fact that in 1952 Sergey Mergelyan was awarded the Stalin (State) Prize of Second Degree with the payment of 100,000 rubles. The sum for those times was astronomical (it was possible to buy 6 passenger cars “Pobeda”). Commenting the awarding President of the USSR Academy of Sciences academician A. N. Nesmeyanov noted that Mergelyan’s work had: “Particular importance from the view point of using the results in the operation of large automatic computers.”[8]


Mergelyan’s theorem which gives the complete solution of the problem of approximation by polynomials is recognized as classical [1]. All students who take the course “Theory of Functions” will study it.[8]


In 1956 Mergelyan wrote articles “Weight approximations by polynomials” and “Harmonic approximation and approximate solution of Cauchy problem for Laplace equation.”[8]


Область научных интересов С. Н. Мергеляна — теория приближения и представления функций комплексного переменного, теория наилучших приближений функций комплексного переменного, теория равномерного приближения функций комплексного переменного многочленами и рациональными функциями, проблемы среднеквадратичного приближения и полноты систем аналитических функций комплексного переменного сходящимися последовательностями аналитических функций, проблема наилучшей мажоранты, теория гармонических функций.[2]

Основные труды С. Н. Мергеляна относятся к теории функций комплексного переменного, в частности к теории равномерного приближения многочленами и рациональными функциями комплексного переменного (теоремы Мергеляна). Создал свои методы приближения многочленами и рациональными функциями. В 1951 г. предложил решение задачи о приближении непрерывных функций полиномами. В 1954 г. решил аппроксимационную проблему Бернштейна. В 1962 г. изучил задачу о приближении функций, удовлетворяющих свойствам гладкости, для произвольного множества.[2]

С. Н. Мергелян опубликовал монографии[2]

О скорости приближения аналитических функций полиномами в замкнутых областях (1947); Некоторые вопросы конструктивной теории функций (1951); Равномерные приближения функций комплексного переменного (1952); О полноте систем аналитических функций (1953); Весовые приближения многочленами (1956); Избранные вопросы теории приближений (1966).



Мергелян был также талантливым организатором науки. В 1956-60гг. С. Мергелян был директором Научно- исследовательского института математических машин, который сегодня известен нам как "Институт Мергеляна".[3]

В 1951, Сергей Мергелян доказал свою знаменитую теорему о приближении многочленами. Эта теорема завершила длинную серию исследований, начатую в 1885г. и составленную из классических результатов К. Вейерштрасса, К. Рунге, Дж. Уолша, M. Лаврентьева, M. Келдыша и других. Новые термины "Теорема Мергеляна" и "Множества Мергеляна" нашли свое место в учебниках и монографиях по теории приближений.[3]

За эти выдающиеся исследования Мергеляну в 1952г. была присуждена Государственная премия СССР, а в следующем году 25-летний ученый был избран членом-корреспондентом АН СССР. В том же году он был избран членом- корреспондентом АН Арм. ССР, а в 1956 -- членом АН Арм. ССР.[3]

Мергелян провел глубокие исследования и получил ценные результаты в таких областях как наилучшее приближение многочленами на произвольном континууме, весовые приближения многочленами на вещественной оси, точечная аппроксимация многочленами на замкнутых множествах комплексной плоскости, равномерное приближение гармоническими функциями на компактных множествах и целыми функциями на неограниченном континууме, единственность гармонических функций. В теории дифференциальных уравнений его результаты относились к сфере задачи Коши и некоторых других вопросов.[3]

Научные достижения Мергеляна существенно способствовали становлению, развитию и международному признанию армянской математической школы, чему свидетельствовала организованная в Ереване в 1965г. по инициативе и при активном участии С. Мергеляна крупная международная конференция по теории функций. В работе конференции приняли участие многие видные математики мира, что способствовало международному сотрудничеству и дальнейшему продвижению армянской математической школы.[3]


His research was dealt with approximation of continuous functions satisfying the smoothness properties for an arbitrary set (1962) and the solution of Bernstein’s approximate problem (1963). [8]

In MSU he published work “The Soviet Mathematical School” together with academician N. N. Bogolyubov. [8]

Career[edit]

Mergelyan began working at the Institute of Mathematics of the Academy of Sciences of Armenian SSR in 1945 and worked there through 1957. He was initially a lab assistant, then junior and senior researcher.[2] He taught at Yerevan State University (YSU) from 1949 to 1956 and at Moscow State University's Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics from 1954 to 1958.[2][12][8] Mergelyan was named professor at YSU in 1951.[15][1]

Yerevan Institute of Mathematical Machines (1956–60)[edit]

User:Yerevantsi/sandbox/MergelyanInst

In 1956 Mergelyan was appointed director of the Yerevan Scientific Research Institute of Mathematical Machines (YerNIIMM).[b] It was established on July 15, 1956 after the central authorities in Moscow approved the proposal of three prominent Armenian scientists—Viktor Ambartsumian, Artashes Shahinian, and Andronik Iosifyan, to establish a research institute specializing in design and production of electronic and computer machines. The institute became popularly known as the "Mergelyan Institute" and remains known by that name till today.[8][7] Mergelyan headed the research institute until 1960.[8][2][1][15] According to Apoyan, Ambartsumian had an indirect role in its establishment, while the central figure was Mergelyan.[7]

In 1958–60 the Mergelyan Institute produced its first-generation computers called "Aragats", "Razdan-1" and "Yerevan". In 1958–61, "Razdan-2", the Soviet Union's first computer completely assembled on semiconductor devices was designed at the institute.[8]


Khachatryan, Karen H. (2015). "Հայ գիտության ներդրումը ԽՍՀՄ ռազմա արդյունաբերական ոլորտում հետպատերազմական առաջին տասնամյակներին (1950-1960-ական թթ.) [The Armenian Science's Contribution to the Military-Industrial Sphere of the USSR during the First Post-war Decades (1950-1960s)]". Lraber Hasarakakan Gitutyunneri (in Armenian) (2): 77–86.


In 1957 Mergelyan founded and headed the joint Computing Center of Armenian Academy of Sciences and Yerevan State University (YSU).[8]


In 1959 he published new work “Approximation of a complex variable functions” in jubilee collection of articles “Mathematics in the USSR for forty years: 1917-1957.” In April 1959 he visited the United States as a member of the Soviet delegation.[8]

Mergelyan (1928-2008) was the youngest Ph.D. in the history of the USSR (his degree was awarded at the age of 20), the youngest corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences (since 1953, the title was awarded at the age of 24), and the youngest academician of Armenian Academy of Sciences (since 1956). Mergelyan's theorem, which gives the complete solution of the problem of approximation by polynomials, is recognized as classical. He also played outstanding role in the history of Armenian computing.[16]

Moscow (1960–71)[edit]

Mergelyan moved to Moscow in 1960 and continued to work at the Steklov Mathematical Institute of the USSR Academy of Sciences. In 1963 he was elected Deputy Secretary of Department of Mathematics of the Academy.[8] In 1961[3][1]/1963[15]/1964[8] he became the the head of department of complex analysis at the Mathematical Institute, a position he held until 1971[3][15][1] [c]

In 1964–68 he also resumed teaching at the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics of Moscow State University.[8][12]


В 1961–1986 гг. С. Н. Мергелян работал старшим научным сотрудником, заведующим Отделом комплексного переменного в МИАН. В 1964–1971 гг. — заместитель академика-секретаря Отделения математики АН СССР. Одновременно преподавал в МГУ — профессор механико-математического факультета 1964–1968 гг.[2]

In 1962/63-65 and 1971-79 he headed the Computer Center of the Armenian Academy of Sciences and Yerevan State University.[2][15]



С. Н. Мергелян — основатель (совместно с А. С. Кронродом) ведущей научной школы Российской Федерации «Комплексный анализ» Математического института им. В. А. Стеклова РАН. Руководители школы — Anatoli Georgievich Vitushkin (до 2004 г.) и E. M. Chirka.[2]

Основатель (совместно с М. В. Келдышем и М. А. Лаврентьевым) ведущей научной школы Российской Федерации «Теория аппроксимаций в комплексном анализе» Математического института им. В. А. Стеклова РАН. Руководитель школы — Andrey Aleksandrovich Gonchar.[2]

С 1967 г. в качестве члена редколлегии С. Н. Мергелян участвовал в издании журнала «Функциональный анализ и его приложения» АН СССР (РАН с 1991 г.).[2]


Сергей Никитович Мергелян — представитель группы ученых, творческая деятельность которых развивалась в период, когда коллектив МИАН был ориентирован в значительной степени на развитие основных и новых направлений математики. Своими научными трудами содействовал формированию прочной позиции МИАН в отечественной науке.[2]

Return to Armenia (1971–86)[edit]

In the 1970s Mergelyan continued to play a leading role in the organization of sciences in Soviet Armenia.[2] In 1971–79 he headed the Computer Center of the Armenian Academy of Sciences and Yerevan State University.[17] Between 1971 and 1974 he served as vice president of the Armenian Academy of Sciences, while the prominent astrophysicist Victor Ambartsumian was president.[18] In 1972–79 he was chair of numerical analysis at Yerevan State University,[15] and in 1979–82 he headed the department of complex analysis of the Institute of Mathematics of the Armenian Academy of Sciences.[19]


In 1971 President of the Armenian Academy of Sciences Ambartsumyan managed to persuade Mergelyan to return to Armenia as Vice-President of the Academy. Mergelyan again moved to Yerevan. He was entrusted to completely uncharacteristic for him work on “extracting” money from Moscow and its distribution in the Armenian Academy. There was no better way to earn a lot of enemies in record time than this one. Almost all people were dissatisfied with the allocated money. Ingenuous Mergelyan did not recognize manipulations and to complete surprise of the majority of his colleagues Mergelyan in 1974 did not pass the next re-election to the Presidium of the Armenian Academy of Sciences and was forced to leave the Academy. There were many rumors that Ambartsumyan began to see in Mergelyan his competitor for the post of President of the Academy and invented this clever combination to get rid of the competitor forever. The shock from Mergelyan’s failure was so great that some academicians even suggested “revoting” the elections, but Ambartsumyan rebuffed.[8]

After the failure in elections, Mergelyan returned to the Computing Center of Academy of Sciences which he had created and worked there for five years. Then he had to leave it as well. Mergelyan was blamed in “excessive interest in foreign (scientific) trips”. Perhaps he was really interested in frequent meetings with foreign colleagues, which affected the administrative affairs of the Center, but participation in congresses was the important source of the latest scientific information. Sergey Mergelyan lost this post and became the head of Department at the Institute of Mathematics of the Armenian Academy of Sciences. But he never interrupted communication with the USSR Academy of Sciences. For example, in 1981 together with N. N. Bogolyubov he published a special article on the 70th anniversary of his supervisor M. V. Keldysh under the title “On the mathematical works of M. V. Keldysh.”[8]


In 1982 Mergelyan was appointed rector (president) of the Pedagogical Institute of Kirovakan, Armenia's third largest city. He served in that position until 1986.[3][1][15] His appointment to this position was seen as a forced exile for "some sins."[7] Oganjanyan and Silantiev describe it as as "humiliating."[8]

Moscow and United States (1986–96)[edit]

In 1986 Mergelyan moved to Moscow, where he became a research associate at the Steklov Institute of Mathematics.[2] In 1990 he moved to the United States, where he lectured at Brown University and later, in 1991-93 at Cornell University.[8][2] Mergelyan returned to Moscow in 1993 and was named an adviser to the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1994.[2] Unhappy with the situation in post-Soviet Russia, Mergelyan permanently left for the US in 1996. He lived with his son Nikita in Sacramento, California.[8][2]

Personal life and death[edit]

From the mid-1950s to 1986, Mergelyan divided his time between Yerevan and Moscow. In the mid-1950s he was given a two-room apartment in Yerevan and an apartment in Moscow's Lenin Hills, within the new Moscow State University complex.[8][7] He joined the Communist Party in 1955.[8]

Mergelyan married Lydia Vasilievna Kulakova, a graduate of the Kharkov Institute of Theater and an actress at Moscow's Maly Theatre. They met in 1955 and married in 1956. Their wedding took place at the dacha of Andronik Iosifyan near Moscow.[7] They had two sons: Nikita and Sergey.[8] She died in 2002 and was buried at Moscow's Novodevichy Cemetery.[8] Mergelyan spent his last years living with his youngest son's family in Los Angeles. He could hardly walk.[8] He was visited there by his friends and colleagues.[8]

Mergelyan died on August 20, 2008[23][d] at the Glendale Memorial Hospital in Glendale, California.[21][2] The cause was heart failure.[21] The Armenian National Academy of Sciences[22] and President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan sent their condolences.[24] A farewell ceremony was held at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale on August 23.[21][8] In accordance with his wishes, his cremated ashes were transported to Moscow and he was buried on October 12 in Moscow's Novodevichy Cemetery next to his mother and wife.[21][8] His burial was attended by some 12 people. None of his children and no Armenian official attended it.[21]

As a representative of Soviet science Sergey Mergelyan along with other his colleagues visited India, Italy and Australia. In India scientists were met by President Jawaharlal Nehru himself, who paid special attention to the young mathematician. There, in the picturesque park of the Osmania University, Mergelyan met with the American scientist Norbert Wiener, who said that he was familiar with the works of Mergelyan and admired them.[8]
Mergelyan had a good singing voice and even seriously considered becoming an opera singer.[7] "And in 1956 Mergelyan once again surprised everyone – he graduated from the conservatory in vocal class [2]."[8]

Legacy and recognition[edit]

A commemorative plaque at the Yerevan Computer Institute

Mergelyan was among well-known Soviet mathematicians.[e][6][25][26] In his 2016 book Andrew Targowski called Mergelyan "one of the most prominent mathematicians in the world."[27] Radik Martirosyan, President of the Armenian Academy of Sciences, noted in 2018 that Mergelyan and Victor Ambartsumian are two Armenian scientists whose achievements are well-known worldwide.[28][29] Georgi Derluguian and Ruben Hovhannisyan note that Mergelyan is one of the "modern icons of Armenian pride," along with Ambartsumian, Aram Khachaturian, Martiros Saryan, and Tigran Petrosian.[30]

President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan congratulated Mergelyan's 80th birthday in May 2008, noting that he has contributed immensely to the development of sciences in Armenia.[31] Sargsyan awarded him the Order of St. Mesrop Mashtots on May 26, 2008.[32] It was personally handed to Mergelyan by Armen Liloyan, Armenia's Consul General in Los Angeles on July 9.[8][33][34]

Conferences dedicated to Mergelyan's 80th and 90th birthdays were held in Yerevan, Armenia in 2008 and 2018, respectively.[35][36] In 2018 a commemorative plaque devoted to Mergelyan was placed on the Yerevan Computer Research and Development Institute.[37] In a 2018 statement, Armenian president Armen Sarkissian noted that Mergelyan was "an individual and a scientist who not only knew the value of science but throughout his entire life and work was moving science forward, elevating and holding high the Armenian scientific thought. He made a unique contribution not only to the Armenian science but also to the Armenian economy."[38]



his interests lie in theory of functions,

Prof. Norbert Weiner was close in the building, they asked if it would be possible to see him. Especially interested in seeing him was Mr. Mergelyan, who had met Prof. Wiener previously in India during one of the conferences attended by both. Prof. Buck volunteered to locate Prof. Wiener. Mr. Mergelyan's English, which is quite good, allowed the two to converse about their present work without the need of the interpreter.

T H E NEXT MORNING, May 1, Academician Lebedev, Mr. Bazilevskiy, and Mr. Petrov were taken to the IBM installation in Poughkeepsie, while Prof. Ditkin and Mr. Mergelyan were invited to give lectures at NYU.

[39]


Honors[edit]

1953թ. Ս.Մերգելյանն ընտրվել է ԽՍՀՄ ԳԱ և ՀԽՍՀ ԳԱ թղթակից անդամ, իսկ 1956թ.` ՀԽՍՀ ԳԱ ակադեմիկոս:[15]

Laureate of the State award of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (1952). Was awarded with the Order of the Red Banner of Labour.[1]

On October 23, 1953 Mergelyan was elected a corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences, Department of Physical and Mathematical Sciences.[8]

http://isaran.ru/?q=ru/person&guid=443F1C59-3B40-DB0B-84EB-4E6A3F8CB73B

Член-корреспондент АН СССР по Отделению физико-математических наук (математика) с 23 октября 1953 г.[2]

Академик с 1956 г. и вице-президент АН Армянской ССР (ныне — Национальная АН Армении) в 1971–1974 гг.[2]

В связи с разносторонней деятельностью и по случаю 80-летнего юбилея Сергей Мергелян в 2008г. был награжден орденом св. Месропа Маштоца.[3]

Лауреат Государственной премии СССР (1952). Награжден орденом Святого Месропа Маштоца (2008, Армения).[2]

awarded the Stalin Prize in 1952[7]

1956, he was elected academician of the Armenian Academy of Sciences.[8]

soon (at 24 years old!) He was elected a corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences.[7]

Награждён орденом Трудового Красного Знамени (1975).[12] Лауреат Государственной премии СССР (1952).[12]


corr. member of the National Academy of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (1953), acad.(1956).[1]

sources[edit]

Выдающийся армянский математик, видный деятель и организатор науки и образования.[3]

Доктор физико-математических наук (1949, без защиты кандидатской диссертации). Профессор (1952). Член-корреспондент АН СССР/РАН (1953). Академик АН Армянской ССР (1956).[12]


Sergei Nikitovich Mergelyan (1928– ) has a celebrated theorem to his name—one that can be found in many textbooks. Namely, in 1950 he proved a theorem about polynomial approximation that was much better than anything that any of the experts thought could possibly be true. In 1990, I visited Cornell and was pleased to discover that Mergelyan was there at the same time. I told my hosts that I wanted to meet the great man.[40]


A child prodigy and the one chosen by fortune, he got the degree of Doctor of Science when he was 20, while at the age of 24 he was awarded a Stalin Prize and elected a Corresponding Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences (1952).[10]

His theorem on approximation of functions by polynomials is a classical one, along with the theorems of Weierstrass and Runge. His lectures attracted great attention, though female students were more interested in the lecturer himself, a young blue-eyed professor.[10]

The Mergelyan theorem answers a question about the possibility of polynomial approximation of functions of one complex variable. Every function continuous on a compact set K ⊂ C and holomorphic in its interior can be represented in K by a uniformly converging series of polynomials if, and only if, the complement C\K is connected (1952). This result concludes a long series of studies on polynomial approximation of functions of one complex variable (Walsh, Hartogs and Rosenthal, Lavrent’ev, Keldysh). In all these papers a function continuous on a compact set and holomorphic in its interior is approximated by a function holomorphic on the entire compact set (i. e., in a neighbourhood of this set). Polynomial approximation is then obtained by the Runge theorem (1885) that every function holomorphic on a compact set whose complement is connected can be represented in this set by a uniformly converging series of complex polynomials. Schemes of approximations had been improved, step-by-step completing the list of sets on which holomorphic approximations are possible. However, the criterion for holomorphic approximations was obtained only fifteen years later after Mergelyan’s work.[10]


Ծնվել է 1928թ. մայիսի 19-ին Սիմֆերոպոլում: 1947թ. ավարտել է ԵՊՀ ֆիզիկամաթեմատիկական ֆակուլտետը, 1949թ.` ԽՍՀՄ ԳԱ Վ.Ստեկլովի անվան մաթեմատիկական ինստիտուտի ասպիրանտուրան: Գիտությունների թեկնածուի աստիճանի հայցման ներկայացրած նրա ատենախոսությունը մասնագիտական խորհուրդը գնահատել է որպես դոկտորական, և 1949թ. Ս.Մերգելյանին շնորհվել է ֆիզիկամաթեմատիկական գիտությունների դոկտորի գիտական աստիճան[15]


Ս.Մերգելյանի հետազոտություններն ընդգրկում են ժամանակակից անալիզի մի շարք բնագավառներ: Նա հիմնարար արդյունքներ է ստացել կոմպլեքս տիրույթում մոտավորությունների տեսության բնագավառում: Իր կողմից ստեղծված նոր մեթոդով սպառիչ կերպով լուծել է կոմպլեքս փոփոխականի ֆունկցիաները բազմանդամներով հավասարաչափ մոտարկելու հնարավորության պրոբլեմը` ավարտելով մոտավորությունների տեսության զարգացման` 1930-ականներին Մ.Լավրենտևի և Մ.Կելդիշի հետազոտություններով սկսված փուլը:[15]

Ս.Մերգելյանը մեծ վաստակ ունի միջազգային ճանաչում ստացած հայկական մաթեմատիկական գիտական դպրոցի կայացման և հետագա զարգացման, ինչպես նաև Հայաստանում հաշվողական տեխնիկայի ու կիբեռնետիկայի զարգացման գործում:[15]

1952թ. Ս.Մերգելյանին շնորհվել է ԽՍՀՄ Պետական մրցանակ: Պարգևատրվել է Աշխատանքային կարմիր դրոշի, «Մեսրոպ Մաշտոց» (2008) շքանշաններով:[15]





In 1947. at the age of 19, via extern graduating from the Yerevan State Univertity. he entered the postgraduate study at the Steklov Institute of Mathernaiim of the USSR Academy of &lee,. (scientific supervisor M.. V. Keldysh).[41]

His dissertation on the Candidate of Science degree was evaluated ea a doctoral work and quite young Mergelyan immediately became a Doctor of Physical and Mathematical Siamese (1949), then a Professor (1952), a Corresponding Member a the USSR Academy of Science (1953), and Academician of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR (1956). [41]

Mergelyan was she a heeding organizer of science. He was the founding director of the Yerevan Scientific Research Institute of Mathematical Machines (1956-1960), the Director of the Unified Computing Center of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR (nowadays IIAP NAS RA) and Yerevan State Unirereiry (1957-1960, 1963-1965, 1971-1978), the Vice President of the Academy of Sciences of the Armenian SSR (1971-1974). the Deputy Academician of the Secretary of the Department of Mathematics of the USSR Academy of Science' (1963-1971), and the head of V. A. Steklov Mathematical Institute Department of Theory of Functions of Complex Variable.[41]

He also headed the Department of Digital Analysis of the Yerevan Suits University (1972-1979), the Deportment of Complex Analytic at the Institute of Mathematics of the Academy of Sciences &the USSR (1979-1982)[41]

[41]


rest[edit]

Vardapetyan, Aren (August 2008). "Чем реже видим – тем больше любим, или Юбилей гения". Noev Kovcheg (in Russian). No. 8 (131). Archived from the original on 24 January 2019.


Nitusov, Alexander. "Sergey Nikitovich Mergelyan". computer-museum.ru. Russian Virtual Computer Museum. Archived from the original on 2 January 2020.

Gyulmisaryan, Ruben (25 August 2019). "Ովքեր ընդհատեցին Մերգելյանի թռիչքը, կամ մարդկային նախանձին` գիտական պատասխան" (in Armenian). Sputnik Armenia. Archived from the original on 25 January 2020.

https://m.ru.armeniasputnik.am/columnists/20171217/9847855/nechistaya-matematika-ili-komu-ne-daval-pokoya-genij-mergelyana.html

Ogandzhanyan, Sergey (22 April 2017). "Сергей Никитович Мергелян: победы и поражения". computer-museum.ru (in Russian). Virtual Computer Museum. Archived from the original on 25 January 2020.

Ogandzhanyan, Sergey (27 March 2018). "Сергей Мергелян: победы и поражения". mostga.am (in Russian). "Most" Popular Science section of Golos Armenii. Archived from the original on 14 February 2020.

"Computer Center named after S. Mergelyan". vsu.am. Vanadzor State University. Archived from the original on 25 January 2020.

"History". mergelyan.am. Yerevan Plant of Mathematical Machines CSJC. Archived from the original on 25 January 2020.


Mergelian. Later, he entered the first Scientific Council on Cybernetics and his activities on YerRI MM organization found reflection in Yerevan society in the name of this institution as “Mergelian's institute”. In late 1957, a Computing Centre was organized as a part of the Armenian Academy of Sciences.[42]



Science and Technology in Armenia

Electronics and Informatics Development in Armenian SSR (1960-1988)

http://rnas.asj-oa.am/view/people/==041C==0435==0440==0433==0435==043B==044F==043D=3A==0421=2E_==041D=2E=3A=3A.html



On a Conjecture of Mergelyan

The most general result on the approximation of functions by polynomials was obtained by S. N. Mergelyan [1], https://link.springer.com/article/10.3103/S1066369X13090028

http://www.mathnet.ru/php/archive.phtml?wshow=paper&jrnid=rm&paperid=8302&option_lang=eng

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17476933.2013.837048

https://www.ams.org/journals/proc/1974-044-02/S0002-9939-1974-0361097-5/

https://www.jstor.org/stable/2309292

References[edit]

Notes
  1. ^ "В то время оказался самым молодым (в 21 год) доктором наук в стране."[2]
    "Sergey Mergelyan was the youngest PhD in the history of the USSR (degree was awarded at the age of 20)"[8]
    "Mergelyan became the youngest doctor of science in the history of Soviet mathematics. He was 21 years old."[7]
  2. ^ Russian: Ереванский научно-исследовательский институт математических машин, Yerevanskiy nauchno-issledovatel'skiy institut matematicheskikh mashin, YerNIIMM; Armenian: Երևանի մաթեմատիկական մեքենաների գիտահետազոտական ինստիտուտ, Yerevani matematikakan mekenaneri gitahetazotakan institut, ԵրՄՄԳՀԻ, YerMMGHI
  3. ^ or until 2002[8]
  4. ^ Other sources indicate August 19, 2008 as the date of his death.[1][15]
  5. ^ Anatoli Georgievich Vitushkin: Sergei Nikitovich Mergelyan is another bright star in the constellation of Russian mathematicians."[10]
Citations
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Sergey N. Mergelyan". sci.am. National Academy of Sciences of Armenia. Archived from the original on 15 February 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai "In memoria. Мергелян Сергей Никитич". mi-ras.ru (in Russian). Steklov Institute of Mathematics. Archived from the original on 26 January 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Arakelian, N. U.; Sahakian, A. A. (2008). "Сергей Никитович Мергелян (1928-2008) [Sergey Nikitovich Mergelyan (1928-2008)]". Proceedings of the NAS Armenia: Mathematics (in Russian). 43 (6). National Academy of Sciences of Armenia: 3–5. (archived text)
  4. ^ "Sergei Nikitovich Mergelyan". genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu. Mathematics Genealogy Project. Archived from the original on 18 August 2021.
  5. ^ López Lagomasino, Guillermo; Martínez Finkelshtein, Andrei; Nevai, Paul; Saff, Edward B. (August 2013). "Andrei Aleksandrovich Gonchar November 21, 1931–October 10, 2012". Journal of Approximation Theory. 172: A1–A13. Under the supervision of S.N. Mergelyan, he defended his Candidate's (Ph.D.) thesis at the same university in 1957...
  6. ^ a b Hendrickx, Bart (2019). "Soviet Weather Watch" (PDF). Space Chronicle. 72. British Interplanetary Society: 58. ...the famous mathematician Sergei Mergelyan, a fellow Soviet Armenian,...
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Apoyan, Grigor (14 August 2005). "Эссе о математике и не только о нем [An Essay on Mathematics and Not Only]". Almanac Lebed (in Russian). No. 438. Archived from the original on 31 January 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw Oganjanyan, Sergey; Silantiev, Sergey (2017). "Sergey Mergelyan: Triumph and Tragedy". Fourth International Conference on Computer Technology in Russia and in the Former Soviet Union (SORUCOM). IEEE Computer Society: 8–12. doi:10.1109/sorucom.2017.00008.
  9. ^ a b c d e Shahinian, Artashes (May 17, 1949). "Սերգեյ Մերգելյանի մասին [About Sergey Mergelyan]" (in Armenian). Fundamental Scientific Library, National Academy of Sciences of Armenia. Archived from the original on 13 February 2020.
  10. ^ a b c d e Vitushkin, A.G. (2006). "Half a Century As One Day". In Bolibruch, A. A. (ed.). Mathematical Events of the Twentieth Century. Springer. p. 462. ISBN 978-3-540-23235-3.
  11. ^ [9][2][3][8]
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h "Мергелян Сергей Никитович". letopis.msu.ru (in Russian). Moscow State University. Archived from the original on 18 January 2019.
  13. ^ [9][12][2][1]
  14. ^ Mergelyan, S. N. (1949). "О наилучших приближениях в комплексной области [On Best Approximations in a Complex Region]". Uspekhi Matematicheskikh Nauk (in Russian). 33 (5): 202–204. (archived PDF)
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Սերգեյ Նիկիտի Մերգելյան [Sergey Nikiti Mergelyan]" (in Armenian). Yerevan State University. Archived from the original on 26 January 2020.
  16. ^ Oganjanyan, Sergey B.; Shilov, Valery V.; Silantiev, Sergey A. (2019). "Armenian Computers: First Generations". Histories of Computing in Eastern Europe. Springer Nature. p. 4.
  17. ^ [15][2][3][1]
  18. ^ [15][2][3][1]
  19. ^ [15][3][2]
  20. ^ "Скончался выдающийся ученый, академик Сергей Мергелян" (in Russian). Armenpress. 22 August 2008. Archived from the original on 16 February 2020.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Apoyan, Grigor (2 November 2008). "Очень Грустное Послесловие [A Very Sad Afterword]". Almanac Lebed (in Russian). No. 578. Archived from the original on 25 July 2019.
  22. ^ a b "Մահացել է ակադեմիկոս Սերգեյ Մերգելյանը [Academician Sergey Mergelyan Dead]". panorama.am (in Armenian). 22 August 2008. Archived from the original on 14 May 2019.
  23. ^ [8][20][21][2][22]
  24. ^ "Message of condolences by president Serzh Sargsyan on the demise of Sergei Mergelian". president.am. President of the Republic of Armenia. 23 August 2008. Archived from the original on 24 April 2018.
  25. ^ Vinogradov, I. (January 1968). "Mathematicians Looking Ahead". The Mathematics Teacher. 61 (1): 44–45. From the virtually endless list of scientists who have taken the postgraduate courses of the Mathematics Institute I should like to name Academician M. Keldysh, President of the USSR Academy of Sciences; Academicians I. Vekua, P. Kochina, A. Maltsev, S. Sobolev, and S. Khristianovich; and Corresponding Members of the USSR Academy of Sciences S. Mergelyan, V. Sokolovsky, and I. Shafarevich, as well as Academician N. Erugin, of the Byelorussian Academy of Sciences, and S. Siradjinov, Correspond ing Member of the Uzbek Academy of Sciences.
  26. ^ Kukushkin, Boris (1996). "The olympiad movement in Russia". International Journal of Educational Research. 25 (6): 561. A well-known Soviet mathematician, S. N. Mergelyan...
  27. ^ Targowski, Andrew (2016). The History, Present State, and Future of Information Technology. Informing Science Press. p. 91. ISBN 9781681100029.
  28. ^ "Նրա երազանքն էր, որպեսզի Հայաստանը դառնա առաջատար գիտական կենտրոն, և ես ուրախ եմ, որ սա կատարվում է. ասում է Սերգեյ Մերգելյանի կրտսեր որդին` Սերգեյ Մերգելյան". Aravot (in Armenian). 21 May 2018. Archived from the original on 31 January 2020. {{cite news}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; 4 July 2018 suggested (help)
  29. ^ "ՀՀ ԳԱԱ-ում մեկնարկեց ականավոր գիտնական Սերգեյ Մերգելյանի 90-ամյա հոբելյանին նվիրված միջազգային գիտաժողովը". sci.am (in Armenian). National Academy of Sciences of Armenia. 21 May 2018.
  30. ^ Derluguian, Georgi; Hovhannisyan, Ruben (Fall 2018). "The Armenian Anomaly: Toward an Interdisciplinary Interpretation". Demokratizatsiya. 26 (4): 454. ...a small Soviet republic that was linked to a parade of world luminaries and modern icons of Armenian pride: the composer Aram Khachaturian, the painter Martiros Sarian, the astrophysicist Victor Ambartsumian, the mathematician Sergei Mergelian, and the chess champion Tigran Petrosian, among others.
  31. ^ "Congratulatory Message of President Serzh Sarkissian on the Occasion of the 80th Anniversary of Sergei Mergelian". president.am. President of the Republic of Armenia. 20 May 2008. Archived from the original on 23 April 2018.
  32. ^ "Սերժ Սարգսյանը պարգևատրել է մի խումբ գործիչների ՀՀ շքանշանով ու մեդալներով". Tert.am (in Armenian). 26 May 2008. Archived from the original on 1 February 2020.
  33. ^ "Լոս Անջելեսում ՀՀ գլխավոր հյուպատոս Ա. Լիլոյանը Սբ Մեսրոպ Մաշտոցի շքանշան է հանձնել ՀՀ ԳԱԱ ակադեմիկոս Սերգեյ Մերգելյանին" (in Armenian). Armenpress. 11 July 2008. Archived from the original on 1 February 2020.
  34. ^ "Սբ. Մեսրոպ Մաշտոցի շքանշանը հանձնվեց Սերգեյ Մելգելյանին". azatutyun.am (in Armenian). RFE/RL. 12 July 2008. Archived from the original on 1 February 2020.
  35. ^ "Mergelyan - 80 Conference". math.sci.am. Institute of Mathematics, National Academy of Sciences of Armenia. May 2008. Archived from the original on 27 March 2020. {{cite web}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; 15 February 2020 suggested (help)
  36. ^ "International Conference Dedicated to 90th Anniversary of Sergey Mergelyan" (PDF). ysu.am. Yerevan, Armenia: Yerevan State University. May 2018. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 February 2020. {{cite web}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; 25 January 2020 suggested (help)
  37. ^ "Կտեղադրվեն Սերգեյ Մերգելյանի և Սեն Արևշատյանի հիշատակը հավերժացնող հուշատախտակներ". yerevan.am (in Armenian). Yerevan Municipality. 30 May 2018. Archived from the original on 1 June 2018.
  38. ^ "Address by President Armen Sarkissian to the participants of the Scientific Conference dedicated to the 90th birth anniversary of the Academician Sergei Mergelian". president.am. President of the Republic of Armenia. 21 May 2018. Archived from the original on 25 January 2020.
  39. ^ Zaitzeff, E. M. (November 1959). "Russian visit to U.S. computers". Electrical Engineering. 78 (11). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers: 1112–1117.
  40. ^ Krantz, Steven G. (2002). Mathematical Apocrypha: Stories and Anecdotes of Mathematicians and the Mathematical. Mathematical Association of America. p. 60. ISBN 9780883855393.
  41. ^ a b c d e Editorial Board (2018). "Sergey N. Mergelyan". Mathematical Problems of Computer Science. 49. National Academy of Sciences of Armenia.
  42. ^ Podlovchenko, Rimma (2014). "On Creation and Work of the Yerevan School of Programming". 2014 Third International Conference on Computer Technology in Russia and in the Former Soviet Union. 1. IEEE: 19–22. doi:10.1109/SoRuCom.2014.12.

External links[edit]