Gaetano Fichera

Gaetano Fichera

Gaetano Fichera in 1976 (photo by Konrad Jacobs)
Born 8 February 1922
Acireale
Died 1 June 1996(1996-06-01) (aged 74)
Rome
Nationality Italian
Fields Mathematics
Institutions
Alma mater Università di Roma, 1941
Doctoral advisor Mauro Picone
Doctoral students see the teaching activity section
Known for
Notable awards

Gaetano Fichera (8 February 1922 – 1 June 1996) was an Italian mathematician, working in mathematical analysis, linear elasticity, partial differential equations and several complex variables. He was born in Acireale, and died in Rome.

Biography

He was born in Acireale, a town near Catania in Sicily, the elder of the four sons of Giuseppe Fichera and Marianna Abate.[1] His father Giuseppe was a professor of mathematics and influenced the young Gaetano starting his lifelong passion. In his young years he was a talented football player. On 1 February 1943 he was in the Italian Army and during the events of September 1943 he was taken prisoner by the Nazist troops, kept imprisoned in Teramo and then sent to Verona: he succeeded in escaping from there and reached the Italian region of Emilia-Romagna, spending with partisans the last year of war. After the war he was first in Rome and then in Trieste, where he met Matelda Colautti, which become his wife in 1952.

Education and academic career

After graduating from the liceo classico in only two years, he entered the University of Catania at the age of 16, being there from 1937 to 1939 and studying under Pia Nalli. Then he went to the university of Rome, where in 1941 he earned his laurea with magna cum laude under the direction of Mauro Picone, when he was only 19. He was immediately appointed by Picone as an assistant professor to his chair and as a researcher at the Istituto Nazionale per le Applicazioni del Calcolo, becoming his pupil. After the war he went back to Rome working with Mauro Picone: in 1948 he became "Libero Docente" (free professor) of mathematical analysis and in 1949 he was appointed as full professor at the University of Trieste. As he remembers in (Fichera 1991, p. 14), in both cases one of the members of the judging commission was Renato Caccioppoli, which become a close friend of him. From 1956 onward he was full professor at the University of Rome in the chair of mathematical analysis and then at the Istituto Nazionale di Alta Matematica in the chair of higher analysis, succeeding to Luigi Fantappiè. He retired from university teaching in 1992,[2] but was professionally very active until his death in 1996: particularly, as a member of the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei and first director of the journal Rendiconti Lincei – Matematica e Applicazioni[3] he succeeded in reviving the reputation of this publication.[4]

Honours

He was member of several academies, notably of the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, the Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze detta dei XL and of the Russian Academy of Science.

Teachers

His lifelong friendship with his teacher Mauro Picone is remembered by him in several occasions. As recalled by Colautti Fichera (2007, pp. 13–14), his father Giuseppe was an assistant professor to the chair of Picone while he was teaching at the University of Catania: they become friends and their friendship lasted even when Giuseppe was forced to leave the academic career for economic reasons, being already the father of two sons, until Giuseppe's death. The young, in effect child, Gaetano, was kept by Picone in his arms. From 1939 to 1941 the young Fichera developed his research directly under the supervision of Picone: as he remembers, it was a time of intense work. But also, when he was back from the front in April 1945[5] he met Picone while he was in Roma in his way back to Sicily, and his advisor was so happy to see him as a father can be seeing its living child. Another mathematician Fichera was influenced by and acknowledged as one of his teachers and inspirators was Pia Nalli: she was an outstanding analyst, teaching for several years at the University of Catania, being his teacher of mathematical analysis from 1937 to 1939. Antonio Signorini and Francesco Severi were two of Fichera's teachers of the Roman period: the first one introduced him and inspired his research in the field of linear elasticity while the second inspired his research in the field he taught him i.e. the theory of analytic functions of several complex variables. Signorini had a strong long-time friendship with Picone: on a wall of the apartment building where they lived, in Via delle Tre Madonne, 18 in Rome, a memorial tablet which commemorates the two friends is placed, as Fichera (1995b, p. 47) recalls. The two great mathematicians extended their friendship to the young Fichera, and as a consequence this led to the solution of the Signorini problem and the foundation of the theory of variational inequalities. Fichera's relations with Severi were not as friendly as with Signorini and Picone: nevertheless, Severi, which was one of the most influential Italian mathematicians of the first half of the 20th century, esteemed the young mathematician. During a course on the theory of analytic functions of several complex variables taught at the Istituto Nazionale di Alta Matematica from the fall of 1956 and the beginning of the 1957, whose lectures were collected in the book (Severi 1958), Severi posed the problem of generalizing his theorem on the Dirichlet problem for holomorphic function of several variables, as Fichera (1957, p. 707) recalls: the result was the paper (Fichera 1957), which is a masterpiece, although not generally acknowledged for various reasons described by Range (2002, pp. 6–11). Other scientists he had as teachers during the period 1939–1941 were Enrico Bompiani, Leonida Tonelli and Giuseppe Armellini: he remembered them with great respect and admiration, even if he did not share all their opinions and ideas, as Colautti Fichera (2007, p. 16) recalls.

Friends

A complete list of Fichera's friends includes some of the best scientists and mathematicians of the 20th century: Olga Oleinik, Olga Ladyzhenskaya, Israel Gel'fand, Ivan Petrovsky, Vladimir Maz'ya, Nikoloz Muskhelishvili, Ilia Vekua, Richard Courant, Fritz John, Kurt Friedrichs, Peter Lax, Louis Nirenberg, Ronald Rivlin, Hans Lewy, Clifford Truesdell, Edmund Hlawka, Ian Sneddon, Jean Leray, Alexander Weinstein, Alexander Ostrowski, Renato Caccioppoli, Solomon Mikhlin, Paul Naghdi, Marston Morse were among his friends, scientific collaborators and correspondents, just to name a few. He built up such a network of contacts being invited several times to lecture on his research by various universities and research institutions, and also participating to several academic conferences, always upon invitation. This long series of scientific journeys started in 1951, when he went to the USA together with his master and friend Mauro Picone and Bruno de Finetti in order to examine the capabilities and characteristics of the first electronic computers and purchase one for the Istituto Nazionale per le Applicazioni del Calcolo: the machine they advised to purchase was the first computer ever working in Italy. The most complete source about his friends and collaborators is the book (Colautti Fichera 2007) by his wife Matelda: in those reference it is also possible to find a fairly complete description of Gaetano Fichera's scientific journeys.

The close friendship between Angelo Pescarini and Fichera has not his roots in their scientific interests: it is another war story. As Oleinik (1997, p. 12) recalls, Gaetano, being escaped from Verona and hidden in a convent in Alfonsine, tried to get in touch with the local group of partisans in order to help the people of that town who had been so helpful with him: they were informed about an assistant professor to the chair of higher analysis in Rome who was trying to reach them. Angelo, which was a student of mathematics at the University of Bologna under Gianfranco Cimmino, a former pupil of Mauro Picone, was charged of the task of testing the truth of Gaetano's assertions, examining him in mathematics: his question was:– "Mi sai dire una condizione sufficiente per scambiare un limite con un integrale (Can you give me a sufficient condition for interchanging limit and integration)?"–. Gaetano quickly answered:– "Non solo ti darò la condizione sufficiente, ma ti darò anche la condizione necessaria e pure per insiemi non limitati (I can give you not only a sufficient condition, but also a necessary condition, and not only for bounded domains, but also for unbounded domains)"–. In effect, Fichera proved such a theorem in the paper (Fichera 1943), his latest paper written in while he was in Rome before joining the army: from that moment on he often used to joke saying that good mathematicians can always have a good application, even for saving one's life.

One of his best friends and appreciated scientific collaborator was Olga Arsenievna Oleinik: she cured the redaction of his last posthumous paper (Fichera 1997), as Colautti Fichera (2007, pp. 202–204) recalls. Also, she used to discuss his work with Gaetano, as he did with her: sometimes their discussion become lively, but nothing more, since they were extremely good friends and estimators of each one's work.

Work

Research activity

He is the author of more than 250 papers and 18 books (monographs and course notes): his work concerns mainly the fields of pure and applied mathematics listed below. A common characteristic to all of his research is the use of the methods of functional analysis to prove existence, uniqueness and approximation theorems for the various problems he studied, and also a high consideration of the analytic problems related to problems in applied mathematics.

Mathematical theory of elasticity

his work in elasticity theory includes the paper (Fichera 1961c), where Fichera proves the "Fichera's maximum principle", his work on variational inequalities. The work on this last topic started with the paper (Fichera 1963), where he announced the existence and uniqueness theorem for the Signorini problem, and ended with the following one (Fichera 1964a),[6] where the full proof was published: those papers are the founding works of the field of variational inequalities, as remarked by Stuart Antman in (Antman 1983, pp. 282–284).[7] Concerning the Saint-Venant's principle, he was able to prove it using a variational approach and a slight variation of a technique employed by Richard Toupin to study the same problem: in the paper (Fichera 1979a)[8] there is a complete proof of the principle under the hypothesis that the base of the cylinder is a set with piecewise smooth boundary. Also he is known for his researches in the theory of hereditary elasticity: the paper (Fichera 1979b) emphasizes the necessity of analyzing very well the constitutive equations of materials with memory in order to introduce models where an existence and uniqueness theorems can be proved in such a way that the proof does not rely on an implicit choice of the topology of the function space where the problem is studied. At last, it is worth to mention that Clifford Truesdell invited him to write the contributions (Fichera 1972a) and (Fichera 1972b) for Siegfried Flügge's Handbuch der Physik.

Partial differential equations

He was one of the pioneers in the development of the abstract approach through functional analysis in order to study general boundary value problems for linear partial differential equations proving in the paper (Fichera 1955a) a theorem similar in spirit to the Lax–Milgram theorem. He studied deeply the mixed boundary value problem i.e. a boundary value problem where the boundary has to satisfy a mixed boundary condition: in his first paper on the topic, (Fichera 1949), he proves the first existence theorem for the mixed boundary problem for self-adjoint operators of n > 2 variables, while in the paper (Fichera 1955a, pp. 22–29) he proves the same theorem dropping the hypothesis of self-adjointness. He is, according to Oleinik (1997), the founder of the theory of partial differential equations of non-positive characteristics: in the paper (Fichera 1956) he introduced the now called Fichera's function, in order to identify subsets of the boundary of the domain where the boundary value problem for such kind of equations is posed, where it is necessary or not to specify the boundary condition: another account of the theory can be found in the paper (Fichera 1960), which is written in English and was later translated in Russian and Hungarian.[9]

Calculus of variation

His contributions to the calculus of variation are mainly devoted to the proof of existence and uniqueness theorems for maxima and minima of functionals of particular form, in conjunction with his studies on variational inequalities and linear elasticity in theoretical and applied problems: in the paper (Fichera 1964a) a semicontinuity theorem for a functional introduced in the same paper is proved in order to solve the Signorini problem, and this theorem was extended in (Fichera 1964c) to the case where the given functional has general linear operators as arguments, not necessarily partial differential operators.

Functional analysis and eigenvalue theory

It is difficult to single out his contributions to functional analysis since, as stated at the beginning of this section, the methods of functional analysis are ubiquitous in his research: however, it is worth to remember paper (Fichera 1955a), where an important existence theorem is proved.[10]

His contributions in the field of eigenvalue theory began with the paper (Fichera 1955b), where he formalizes a method developed by Mauro Picone for the approximation of eigenvalues of operators subject only to the condition that their inverse is compact: however, as he admits in (Fichera 1974a, pp. 13–14), this method does not give any estimate on the approximation error on the value of the calculated (approximated) eigenvalues.

He contributed also to the classical eigenvalue problem for symmetric operators, introducing the method of orthogonal invariants.[11]

Approximation theory

His work in this field is mainly related to the study of systems of functions, possibly being particular solutions of a given partial differential equation or system of such equations, in order to prove their completeness on the boundary of a given domain. The interest of this research is obvious: given such a system of functions, every solution of a boundary value problem can be approximated by an infinite series or Fourier type integral in the topology of a given function space. One of the most famous examples of this kind of theorem is Mergelyan's theorem, which completely solves the problem in the class of holomorphic functions for a compact set in the complex plane. In his paper (Fichera 1948), Fichera studies this problem for harmonic functions,[12] relaxing the smoothness requirements on the boundary in the already cited work (Fichera 1955a): a survey on his and others' work in this area, including contributions of Mauro Picone, Bernard Malgrange, Felix Browder and a number of other mathematicians, is contained in the paper (Fichera 1979c). Another branch of his studies on approximation theory is strictly tied to complex analysis in one variable, and to the already cited Mergelyan's theorem: he studied the problem of approximating continuous functions on a compact set (and analytic on its interior if this is non void) of the complex plane by rational functions with prescribed poles, simple or not. The paper (Fichera 1974b) surveys the contribution to the solution of this and related problems by Sergey Mergelyan, Lennart Carleson, Gábor Szegő as well as others, including his own.

Potential theory

His contributions to potential theory are very important. The results of his paper (Fichera 1948) occupy paragraph 24 of chapter II of the textbook (Günther 1967, pp. 108–117), as remarked by in Oleinik (1997, p. 11). Also, his researches (Fichera 1975) and (Fichera 1976) on the asymptotic behaviour of the electric field near singular points of the conducting surface, widely known among the specialists (as several works of V.G. Maz'ya, S.A. Nazarov, B.A. Plamenevsky, B.W. Schulze and others testify) can be included in between his works in potential theory.

Measure and integration theory

His main contributions to those topics and are the papers (Fichera 1943) and (Fichera 1954). In the first one he proves that a condition on a sequence of integrable functions previously introduced by Mauro Picone is both necessary and sufficient in order to assure that limit process and the integration process commute, both in bounded and unbounded domains: the theorem is similar in spirit to the dominated convergence theorem, which however only states a sufficient condition. The second paper contains an extension of the Lebesgue's decomposition theorem to finitely additive measures: this extension required him to generalize of the Radon–Nykodim derivative, requiring it to be a set function belonging to a given class and minimizing a particular functional.

Complex analysis of functions of one and several variables

He contributed to both the classical topic of complex analysis in one variable and the more recent one of complex analysis in several variables. His contributions to complex analysis in one variable are essentially approximation results, well described in the survey paper (Fichera 1974b).[13] In the field of functions of several complex variables, his contributions were outstanding, but also not generally acknowledged.[14] Precisely, in the paper (Fichera 1957) he solved the Dirichlet problem for holomorphic function of several variables under the hypothesis that the boundary of the domain Ω has a Hölder continuous normal vector (i.e. it belongs to the C{1,α} class) and the Dirichlet boundary condition is a function belonging to the Sobolev space H1/2(∂Ω) satisfying the weak form of the tangential Cauchy–Riemann condition,[15][16] extending a previous result of Francesco Severi: this theorem and the Lewy–Kneser theorem on the local Cauchy problem for holomorphic functions of several variables, laid the foundations of the theory of CR-functions. Another important result is his proof in (Fichera 1983) of an extension of Morera theorem to functions of several complex variables, under the hypothesis that the given function f is only locally integrable: previous proofs under more restrictive assumptions were given by Francesco Severi in (Severi 1931) and Salomon Bochner in (Bochner 1953). He also studied the properties of the real part and imaginary part of functions of several complex variables, i.e. pluriharmonic functions: starting from the paper (Amoroso 1912) he gives a trace condition analogous to the tangential Cauchy–Riemann condition for the solvability of the Dirichlet problem for pluriharmonic functions in the paper (Fichera 1982a), and generalizes a theorem of Luigi Amoroso to the complex vector space n  2n for n  2 complex variables in the paper (Fichera 1982b). Also he was able to prove that an integro-differential equation defined on the boundary of a smooth domain by Luigi Amoroso in his cited paper, the Amoroso integro-differential equation, is a necessary and sufficient condition for the solvability of the Dirichlet problem for pluriharmonic functions when this domain is the sphere in 2  4.[17]

Exterior differential forms

His contributions to the theory of exterior differential forms started as a war story:[18] having read a famous memoir of Enrico Betti (where Betti numbers were introduced) just before joining the army, he used this knowledge in order to develop a theory of exterior differential forms while he was kept prisoner in Teramo jail.[19] When he was back in Rome in 1945, he discussed his discovery with Enzo Martinelli, who very tactfully informed him that the idea was already developed by mathematicians Élie Cartan and Georges de Rham. However, he continued work on this theory, contributing with several papers, and also advised all of his students to study it, despite from the fact of being an analyst, as he remarks: his main results are collected in the papers (Fichera 1961a) and (Fichera 1961b). In the first one he introduced k-measures, a concept less general than currents but easier to work with: his aim was to clarify the analytic structure of currents and to prove all relevant results of the theory i.e. the three theorems of de Rham and Hodge theorem on harmonic forms in a simpler, more analytic way. In the second one he developed an abstract Hodge theory, following the axiomatic method, proving an abstract form of Hodge theorem.

Numerical analysis

As noted in the "Functional analysis and eigenvalue theory" section, his main direct contribution to the field of numerical analysis is the introduction of the method of orthogonal invariants for the calculus of eigenvalues of symmetric operators: however, as already remarked, it is hard to find something in his works which is not related to applications. His works on partial differential equations and linear elasticity have always a constructive aim: for example, the results of paper (Fichera 1975), which deals with the asymptotic analysis of the potential, were included in the book (Fichera 1978a) and led to the definition of the Fichera corner problem as a standard benchmark problem for numerical methods.[20] Another example of his work on quantitative problems is the interdisciplinary study (Fichera, Sneider & Wyman 1977), surveyed in (Fichera 1978b), where methods of mathematical analysis and numerical analysis are applied to a problem posed by biological sciences.[21][22]

History of mathematics

his work in this field occupy all the volume (Fichera 2002). He wrote bibliographical sketches for a number of mathematicians, both teachers, friends and collaborators, including Mauro Picone, Luigi Fantappiè, Pia Nalli, Maria Adelaide Sneider, Renato Caccioppoli, Solomon Mikhlin, Francesco Tricomi, Alexander Weinstein, Aldo Ghizzetti. His historical works contain several observations against the so-called historical revisitation: the meaning of this concept is clearly stated in the paper (Fichera 1996). He identifies with the word revisitation the analysis of historical facts basing only on modern conceptions and points of view: this kind of analysis differs from the "true" historical one since it is heavily affected by the historian's point of view. The historian applying this kind of methodology to history of mathematics, and more generally to the history of science, emphasizes the sources that have led a field to its modern shape, neglecting the efforts of the pioneers.

Teaching activity

His teaching activity was almost as intense as his research activity: he also was a pioneer in encouraging gifted women to choose a career in mathematical research, as Weinberger (1999, p. 51) recalls. An almost complete list of his doctoral students is reported below:

  • Lucilla Bassotti
  • Caterina Cassisa
  • Pieranita Castellani Rizzonelli
  • Alberto Cialdea
  • Maria Pia Colautti
  • Luciano De Vito
  • Lamberto Lamberti
  • Flavia Lanzara
  • Umberto Mosco
  • Paolo Emilio Ricci
  • Mirella Schaerf
  • Maria Adelaide Sneider
  • Giuseppe Tomassini

Selected publications

A selection of Gaetano Fichera's works was published respectively by the Unione Matematica Italiana and the Accademia Pontaniana in his "opere scelte" (Fichera 2004) and in the volume (Fichera 2002). These two references include most of the papers listed in this section: however, these volumes does not include his monographs and textbooks, as well as several survey papers on various topic pertaining to his fields of research.

Papers

Research papers

Historical and survey papers

Monographs and textbooks

See also

Notes

  1. The main reference about his personal life is the book (Colautti Fichera 2007).
  2. His last lesson of the course of higher analysis was published in (Fichera 1995a).
  3. This scientific journal is the follow-up of the older and glorious Atti dell'Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei – Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche, Naturali, the official publication of the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei.
  4. See Colautti Fichera (1997, p. 14, footnote), and Galletto (2007, p. 142).
  5. The episode is narrated in (Colautti Fichera 2007, pp. 30–31).
  6. See also its English translation (Fichera 1964b).
  7. These are his only papers in the field of variational inequalities: see the article "Signorini problem" for a discussion of the reasons why he left this field of research.
  8. The same paper was previously published in Russian in a volume in honour of Ilia Vekua: see Colautti Fichera (1997, p. 29) for the exact reference.
  9. See the bibliography (Colautti Fichera 1997): some of the translated papers are available online from the All-Russian Mathematical Portal.
  10. This is Fichera's existence principle: see the survey paper by Valent (1999, p. 84).
  11. See (Fichera 1974a, pp. 33–127), (Fichera 1978a), (Weinberger 1999) and references therein.
  12. See also the monograph (Günther 1967).
  13. See also the "Approximation theory" section.
  14. See the paper (Range 2002).
  15. Introduced by him in the same paper.
  16. See also (Fichera 1986), where the theorem is presented in English and extended to the case that the normal vector and the Dirichlet boundary condition are only continuous.
  17. The details can be found in the paper (Fichera 1982c).
  18. He tells this story in his last lesson (Fichera 1995a, pp. 18–19): see also (Colautti Fichera 2007, p. 21).
  19. This fact is not uncommon in talented people being kept in captivity, as the known experience of Jean Leray with sheaf theory shows.
  20. See also the recollections of Wendland in (Wendland 2007, p. 8).
  21. See also the research announcement (Fichera, Sneider & Wyman 1977a),
  22. Note that Oeinik (1993, pp. 12–13) describes it as a work in the theory of ordinary differential equations, perhaps reflecting the difficulty of classifying such kind of research.
  23. See (Günther, §24) where the results of this paper are reported.

References

Biographical references

  • Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei (2012), Annuario dell'Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei 2012 – CDX dalla Sua Fondazione (PDF) (in Italian), Roma: Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, p. 734 . The "Yearbook" of the renowned Italian scientific institution, including an historical sketch of its history, the list of all past and present members as well as a wealth of informations about its academic and scientific activities.
  • Barbieri, Francesco; Taddei, Ferdinando (2006), L’Accademia di Scienze, Lettere e Arti di Modena dalle origini (1683) al 2005. Tomo I – La storia e i soci (PDF) (in Italian), Modena: Mucchi Editore, p. 359, ISBN 88-7000-419-8 . The first part ("Tomo") of an extensive work on the "Accademia di Scienze, Lettere e Arti di Modena", reporting the history of the academy and biographies of members up to the year 2006.
  • Cosentini, Cristofo (1996), "Ricordo del Prof. Gaetano Fichera, socio d'onore", Memorie e Rendiconti della Accademia di scienze, lettere e belle arti degli Zelanti e dei Dafnici, Serie IV, (in Italian), VI: 429–434 . "Recollection of Prof. Gaetano Fichera, honorary member" is a commemorative paper written by Cristoforo Cosentini, former member and president of the Accademia di scienze, lettere e belle arti degli Zelanti e dei Dafnici and close friend of Gaetano Fichera.
  • Colautti Fichera, Matelda (1997), "Elenco delle pubblicazioni di Gaetano Fichera", Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali. Rendiconti Lincei. Supplemento, 9 (in Italian), 8 (1): 14–33 . The "List of the publications of Gaetano Fichera", prepared by his wife as follow-up to the commemorative paper by Olga Oleinik (1997).
  • Colautti Fichera, Matelda (2007), ... ed è subito sera... La lunga, brevissima vita di Gaetano Fichera (in Italian), Roma: Self-published, p. 217 . The story of the life of Gaetano Fichera written by his wife, Matelda Colautti Fichera. The first, untranslated phrase of the title is the last verse (and title) of a famous poem of Salvatore Quasimodo, and was the concluding phrase of the last lesson of Fichera, in the occasion of his retirement from university teaching in 1992, published in (Fichera 1995a), while a translation of the second phrase is:-"The long, extremely short life of Gaetano Fichera". There is also a free electronic edition with a different title: Colautti Fichera, Matelda (30 September 2011), Gaetano (in Italian), Lulu, p. 217 .
  • Kósa, András (January–April 2006), "Mauro Picone e Gaetano Fichera / Mauro Picone és Gaetano Fichera" (PDF), Italia & Italy (in Hungarian and Italian), No. 28–29: 36–38 . The personal recollection of András Kósa on Gaetano Fichera and Mauro Picone.
  • Malaroda, Roberto (1997), "Intervento", Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali. Rendiconti Lincei. Supplemento, Serie IX, 8 (1): 22 . The "Address" (English translation of the title) of Malaroda at the meeting "Ricordo di Gaetano Fichera" (English translation: "Remembrance of Gaetano Fichera") held in Rome at the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei on the 8th of February 1997.
  • Pagani, Antonio (2005), E' café d'Cai (in Italian), Alfonsine: La Voce del Senio, p. 126 . This book offers the personal recollections of the Author about the life in his birthplace Alfonsine, during the fascist period up to the end of World War II. He describes various episodes of the life of Gaetano Fichera in his town during wartime, their friendship and the relations between Fichera and the Italian resistance movement. The choice of photographs and the presentation of the book are due to Luciano Lucci, who also cured the web edition which is enriched by several pictures at the expense of the loss of printed edition pagination. The first part of the title, up to the colon, is in Emiliano-Romagnolo and means "Cai's Café" where Cai is the nickname of the Author's family, while the second part is in Italian and its English translation reads as:-"the adventures of a young man in Alfonsine during fascism".
  • Presidenza della Repubblica Italiana (July 31, 1973), Medaglia d'oro ai benemeriti della scuola della cultura e dell'arte: Gaetano Fichera, retrieved May 31, 2011 .
  • Ricci, Paolo E. (June 1996), "Scomparsa del Prof. Gaetano Fichera", Notiziario dell'Unione Matematica Italiana (in Italian), XXIII (6): 48–50 .
  • Ricci, P. E.; Gilbert, R. P. (1997), "A Short Biography of Gaetano Fichera", Applicable Analysis, 65 (1–2): 1–2, doi:10.1080/00036819708840545, MR 1674583, Zbl 0973.01037 .
  • Ricci, Paolo E. (2014), "Gaetano Fichera, life and science Master", in Sbordone, Carlo, Equazioni a derivate parziali nell'opera di Gaetano Fichera, Quaderni dell'Accademia Pontaniana, 60, Napoli: Giannini, pp. 23–29, ISBN 978-88-7431-717-2  is the biographical contribution of Paolo Emilio Ricci in the proceedings "Partial differential equations in the work of Gaetano Fichera" (English translation of title) of the day dedicated to the memory of Gaetano Fichera (1 June 2011) during the international conference "New Function Spaces in PDEs and Harmonic Analysis", held in Napoli from May 31 to June 4, 2011.
  • Rivlin, R. S. (1983), "Biography. Gaetano Fichera", Applicable Analysis, 15 (1–4): 3–3, doi:10.1080/00036818308839435, MR 0710179, Zbl 0511.01010 .
  • Salvini, Giorgio (1993), "Saluto a Gaetano Fichera, nel suo 70o compleanno", in Ricci, Paolo Emilio, Problemi attuali dell’analisi e della fisica matematica. Atti del simposio internazionale dedicato a Gaetano Fichera nel suo 70o compleanno. Taormina, 15–17 ottobre 1992, Roma: Dipartimento di Matematica, Università di Roma "La Sapienza", pp. 1–6 .
  • Salvini, Giorgio (1997), "Parole di saluto", Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali. Rendiconti Lincei. Supplemento, Serie IX, 8 (1): 5–6 . The "Salutation address" (free English translation) of Salvini at the meeting "Ricordo di Gaetano Fichera" (English translation: "Remembrance of Gaetano Fichera") held in Rome at the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei on the 8th of February 1997.
  • Vernacchia-Galli, Jole (1986), "José Luis Massera", Regesto delle lauree honoris causa dal 1944 al 1985, Studi e Fonti per la storia dell'Università di Roma (in Italian), 10, Roma: Edizioni Dell'Ateneo, pp. 559–605 . The "regest of honoris causa degrees from 1944 to 1985" (English translation of the title) is a detailed and carefully commented regest of all the documents of the official archive of the Sapienza University of Rome pertaining to the honoris causa degrees, awarded or not. It includes all the awarding proposals submitted during the considered period, detailed presentations of the work of the candidate, if available, and precise references to related articles published on Italian newspapers and magazines, if the laurea was awarded.
  • Vernacchia-Galli, Jole (1986), "Andrej Dmitrievich Sakharov", Regesto delle lauree honoris causa dal 1944 al 1985, Studi e Fonti per la storia dell'Università di Roma (in Italian), 10, Roma: Edizioni Dell'Ateneo, pp. 687–779 . The "regest of honoris causa degrees from 1944 to 1985" (English translation of the title) is a detailed and carefully commented regest of all the documents of the official archive of the Sapienza University of Rome pertaining to the honoris causa degrees, awarded or not. It includes all the awarding proposals submitted during the considered period, detailed presentations of the work of the candidate, if available, and precise references to related articles published on Italian newspapers and magazines, if the laurea was awarded.
  • Vernacchia-Galli, Jole (1986), "Fritz John", Regesto delle lauree honoris causa dal 1944 al 1985, Studi e Fonti per la storia dell'Università di Roma (in Italian), 10, Roma: Edizioni Dell'Ateneo, pp. 823–844 . The "regest of honoris causa degrees from 1944 to 1985" (English translation of the title) is a detailed and carefully commented regest of all the documents of the official archive of the Sapienza University of Rome pertaining to the honoris causa degrees, awarded or not. It includes all the awarding proposals submitted during the considered period, detailed presentations of the work of the candidate, if available, and precise references to related articles published on Italian newspapers and magazines, if the laurea was awarded.
  • Vernacchia-Galli, Jole (1986), "Olga Arsenievna Oleinik", Regesto delle lauree honoris causa dal 1944 al 1985, Studi e Fonti per la storia dell'Università di Roma (in Italian), 10, Roma: Edizioni Dell'Ateneo, pp. 845–855 . The "regest of honoris causa degrees from 1944 to 1985" (English translation of the title) is itself a detailed and carefully commented regest of all the documents of the official archive of the Sapienza University of Rome pertaining to the honoris causa degrees, awarded or not. It includes all the awarding proposals submitted during the considered period, detailed presentations of the work of the candidate, if available, and precise references to related articles published on Italian newspapers and magazines, if the laurea was awarded.
  • Wendland, Wolfgang L. (2007), "In memory of Gaetano Fichera", Le Matematiche, LXII (II): 7–9, MR 2401174 . Some recollections of the author about Gaetano Fichera.

General references

  • Amerio, Luigi (1997), "Intervento", Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali. Rendiconti Lincei. Supplemento, Serie IX, 8 (1): 15–16 . The "Address" (free English translation) of Amerio at the meeting "Ricordo di Gaetano Fichera" (English translation: "Remembrance of Gaetano Fichera") held in Rome at the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei on the 8th of February 1997.
  • Baiocchi, Claudio (1997), "Intervento", Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali. Rendiconti Lincei. Supplemento, Serie IX, 8 (1): 17–18 . The "Address" (free English translation) of Baiocchi at the meeting "Ricordo di Gaetano Fichera" (English translation: "Remembrance of Gaetano Fichera") held in Rome at the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei on the 8th of February 1997.
  • de Lucia, Paolo (2014), "Gaetano Fichera", in Sbordone, Carlo, Equazioni a derivate parziali nell'opera di Gaetano Fichera, Quaderni dell'Accademia Pontaniana (in Italian), 60, Napoli: Giannini, pp. 11–16, ISBN 978-88-7431-717-2 . The biographical contribution of Paolo de Lucia in the proceedings "Partial differential equations in the work of Gaetano Fichera" (English translation of title) of the day dedicated to the memory of Gaetano Fichera (1 June 2011) during the international conference "New Function Spaces in PDEs and Harmonic Analysis", held in Napoli from May 31 to June 4, 2011.
  • Galletto, Dionigi (2007), "Ricordo di Gaetano Fichera a dieci anni dalla morte", Atti Ufficiali dell'Accademia delle Scienze di Torino (in Italian), 2004–2006: 135–142 , available from the Accademia delle Scienze di Torino. "Recollection of Gaetano Fichera ten years after the death" is a commemoration of Gaetano Fichera written by one of the former students of Mauro Picone, and colleague of Fichera at the Turin Academia.
  • Grioli, Giuseppe (1996), "Ricordo di Gaetano Fichera", Rendiconti della Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze detta dei XL, Memorie di Matematica e Applicazioni, Serie 5, (in Italian), 20 (1): 221–224, MR 1438747, Zbl 0942.01023 . "Remembrance of Gaetano Fichera": the recollections of a friends and early colleague at the Istituto Nazionale per le Applicazioni del Calcolo.
  • Grioli, Giuseppe (1997), "Intervento", Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali. Rendiconti Lincei. Supplemento, Serie IX, 8 (1): 19–20 . The "Address" (free English translation) of Grioli at the meeting "Ricordo di Gaetano Fichera" (English translation: "Remembrance of Gaetano Fichera") held in Rome at the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei on 8 February 1997.
  • Lax, Peter (2006) [124o], "Thoughts on Gaetano Fichera", in Mosco, Umberto; Ricci, Paolo Emilio, Volume speciale in occasione dell'85-esimo anniversario della nascita di Gaetano Fichera, Rendiconti della Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze detta dei XL. Memorie di Matematica e Applicazioni, Serie V, Vol. XXX (I), Roma, pp. 1–2, MR 2489588 .
  • Maz'ya, Vladimir (2000), "In memory of Gaetano Fichera" (PDF), in Ricci, Paolo Emilio, Problemi attuali dell’analisi e della fisica matematica. Atti del II simposio internazionale (Taormina, 15–17 ottobre 1998). Dedicato alla memoria del Prof. Gaetano Fichera., Roma: Aracne, pp. 1–4, MR 1809014, Zbl 0977.01027 . Some vivid recollection of Fichera by Vladimir Maz'ya.
  • Maz'ya, Vladimir (2014), "In memory of Gaetano Fichera", in Sbordone, Carlo, Equazioni a derivate parziali nell'opera di Gaetano Fichera, Quaderni dell'Accademia Pontaniana, 60, Napoli: Giannini, pp. 17–23, ISBN 978-88-7431-717-2 . The contribution of Vladimir Maz'ya in the proceedings "Partial differential equations in the work of Gaetano Fichera" (English translation of title) of the day dedicated to the memory of Gaetano Fichera (1 June 2011) during the international conference "New Function Spaces in PDEs and Harmonic Analysis", held in Napoli from May 31 to June 4, 2011, similar to his earlier commemorative paper (Maz'ya 2000).
  • Millán Gasca, Ana (1996), "Gaetano Fichera (1922–1996)", Lettera dall'Italia (in Italian), XI (43–44): 114–115 .
  • Morawetz, Cathleen S. (2006) [124o], "A Memory of Gaetano Fichera", in Mosco, Umberto; Ricci, Paolo Emilio, Volume speciale in occasione dell'85-esimo anniversario della nascita di Gaetano Fichera, Rendiconti della Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze detta dei XL. Memorie di Matematica e Applicazioni, Serie V, Vol. XXX (I), Roma, pp. 3–6, MR 2489589 .
  • Oleinik, Olga A. (1993), "The Scientific work of Gaetano Fichera", in Ricci, Paolo Emilio, Problemi attuali dell’analisi e della fisica matematica. Atti del simposio internazionale dedicato a Gaetano Fichera nel suo 70o compleanno. Taormina, 15–17 ottobre 1992, Roma: Dipartimento di Matematica, Università di Roma "La Sapienza", pp. 7–29, MR 1249085, Zbl 0792.01033 .
  • Oleinik, Olga A. (1997), "The life and scientific work of Gaetano Fichera", Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali. Rendiconti Lincei. Supplemento, Serie IX, 8 (1): 9–14 . The biographical sketch of Fichera by Olga Oleinik at the meeting "Ricordo di Gaetano Fichera" (English translation: "Remembrance of Gaetano Fichera") held in Rome at the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei on the 8th of February 1997. The same paper is also included in the first volume of the selected works of Gaetano Fichera (2004) and in the volume of his historical, biographical, and expository works (2002).
  • Rionero, Salvatore (2014), "Ricordo del Prof. G. Fichera", in Sbordone, Carlo, Equazioni a derivate parziali nell'opera di Gaetano Fichera, Quaderni dell'Accademia Pontaniana (in Italian and English), 60, Napoli: Giannini, pp. 31–48, ISBN 978-88-7431-717-2 . "Remembrance of Prof. G. Fichera" (English translation of title) is the contribution of Salvatore Rionero in the proceedings "Partial differential equations in the work of Gaetano Fichera" (English translation of title) of the day dedicated to the memory of Gaetano Fichera (1 June 2011) during the international conference "New Function Spaces in PDEs and Harmonic Analysis", held in Napoli from May 31 to June 4, 2011. It includes the transparencies of the contribution (written in English) "Asymptotic Behaviour of Solutions of Evolution Problems" by Fichera to the international conference "Waves and Stability in Continuous Media", held in Palermo from October 9 to 14, 1995.
  • Sbordone, Carlo (2014), "Introduzione", in Sbordone, Carlo, Equazioni a derivate parziali nell'opera di Gaetano Fichera, Quaderni dell'Accademia Pontaniana (in Italian and English), 60, Napoli: Giannini, p. 88, ISBN 978-88-7431-717-2 . The "Introduction" (English translation of the title) to the proceedings "Partial differential equations in the work of Gaetano Fichera" (English translation of the title) of the day dedicated to the memory of Gaetano Fichera (1 June 2011) during the international conference "New Function Spaces in PDEs and Harmonic Analysis", held in Napoli from May 31 to June 4, 2011, by its editor, giving a few biographical remarks.
  • Vesentini, Edoardo (1997), "Intervento", Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Classe di Scienze Fisiche, Matematiche e Naturali. Rendiconti Lincei. Supplemento, Serie IX (in Italian), 8 (1): 21 . The "Address" (free English translation) of Vesentini at the meeting "Ricordo di Gaetano Fichera" (English translation: "Remembrance of Gaetano Fichera") held in Rome at the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei on the 8th of February 1997.
  • Zorski, Henrik (1999), "Gaetano Fichera and ISIMM (International Society for Interaction between Analysis and Mechanics)", in Capriz, Gianfranco; Grioli, Giuseppe; Manacorda, Tristano, Interactions between Analysis and Mechanics. The Legacy of Gaetano Fichera. Convegno internazionale (Roma, 22--23 aprile 1998), Atti dei Convegni Lincei, 148, Roma: Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, pp. 11–17 . A biographical work focusing on the contributions of Gaetano Fichera to mechanics and the role played by him in the founding of the ISIMM.

Scientific references

Publications dedicated to him or to his memory

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.