John Williams Calkin


John "Jack" Williams Calkin was an American mathematician, specializing in functional analysis. The Calkin algebra is named after him.
Calkin received his bachelor's degree from Columbia University in 1933 and his master's degree in 1934 and Ph.D. in 1937 from Harvard University. His doctoral dissertation Applications of the Theory of Hilbert Space to Partial Differential Equations; the Self-Adjoint Transformations in Hilbert Space Associated with a Formal Partial Differential Operator of the Second Order and Elliptic Type ) was supervised by Marshall H. Stone. In the dissertation, Calkin acknowledges useful discussions with John von Neumann. At the Institute for Advanced Study, Calkin was a research assistant for the academic year 1937–1938 and in the first eight months of 1942. From 1938 to 1942 he was an assistant professor at the University of New Hampshire and then at Chicago's Illinois Institute of Technology. During the late 1930s and early 1940s he wrote several important papers on operator theory and its applications to partial differential equations.
From Los Alamos, Calkin went in 1946 as a Guggenheim Fellow to the California Institute of Technology. He later taught at the Rice Institute, before he returned in 1949 to Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory as a member of the theoretical division. There he worked on the development of the H-bomb.
Upon his death he was survived by his widow, Emilienne Calkin, and his son, Brant Calkin, from a previous marriage. Brant Calkin is an environmental activist in New Mexico and Utah and former president of the Sierra Club.

Selected publications