Hazel Perfect

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Hazel Perfect (circa 1927 – 8 July 2015)[1] was a British mathematician specialising in combinatorics.

Contributions

Perfect was known for inventing gammoids,[2][3][AMG] for her work with Leon Mirsky on doubly stochastic matrices,[4][SP2] for her three books Topics in Geometry,[5][TIG] Topics in Algebra,[6][TIA] and Independence Theory in Combinatorics,[7][ITC] and for her work as a translator (from an earlier German translation) of Pavel Alexandrov's book An Introduction to the Theory of Groups (Hafner, 1959).[8][ITG] The Perfect–Mirsky conjecture, named after Perfect and Leon Mirsky, concerns the region of the complex plane formed by the eigenvalues of doubly stochastic matrices. Perfect and Mirsky conjectured that for n×n matrices this region is the union of regular polygons of up to n sides, having the roots of unity of each degree up to n as vertices. Perfect and Mirsky proved their conjecture for n3; it was subsequently shown to be true for n=4 and false for n=5, but remains open for larger values of n.[9][SP2]

Education and career

Perfect earned a master's degree through Westfield College (a constituent college for women in the University of London) in 1949, with a thesis on The Reduction of Matrices to Canonical Form.[10] In the 1950s, Perfect was a lecturer at University College of Swansea; she collaborated with Gordon Petersen, a visitor to Swansea at that time, on their translation of Alexandrov's book.[11] She completed her Ph.D. at the University of London in 1969; her dissertation was Studies in Transversal Theory with Particular Reference to Independence Structures and Graphs.[12] She became a reader in mathematics at the University of Sheffield.[13]

Selected publications

Books

TIG.
Perfect, Hazel (1963), Topics in Geometry, Pergamon, MR 0155210[5]
TIA.
Perfect, Hazel (1966), Topics in Algebra, Pergamon[6]
ITC.

Research papers

SP2.
Perfect, Hazel; Mirsky, L. (1965), "Spectral properties of doubly-stochastic matrices", Monatshefte für Mathematik, 69: 35–57, doi:10.1007/BF01313442, MR 0175917, S2CID 120466093
AMG.
Perfect, Hazel (1968), "Applications of Menger's graph theorem", Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications, 22: 96–111, doi:10.1016/0022-247X(68)90163-7, MR 0224494

Translation

ITG.
Alexandroff, P. S. (1959), An Introduction to the Theory of Groups, translated by Perfect, Hazel; Petersen, G. M., New York: Hafner Publishing Co., MR 0099361[8]

References

  1. "Obituaries" (PDF), Newsletter of the London Mathematical Society, p. 41, December 2015
  2. Schrijver, Alexander (2003), Combinatorial optimization: Polyhedra and efficiency, Vol. B: Matroids, trees, stable sets, Algorithms and Combinatorics, vol. 24, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, p. 659, ISBN 3-540-44389-4, MR 1956925
  3. Welsh, D. J. A. (1976), Matroid theory, London and New York: Academic Press, p. 219, ISBN 9780486474397, MR 0427112
  4. O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Leon Mirsky", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  5. 5.0 5.1 Review of Topics in Geometry:
  6. 6.0 6.1 Reviews of Topics in Algebra:
  7. 7.0 7.1 Reviews of Independence Theory in Combinatorics:
  8. 8.0 8.1 Reviews of An Introduction to the Theory of Groups:
  9. Levick, Jeremy; Pereira, Rajesh; Kribs, David W. (2015), "The four-dimensional Perfect–Mirsky Conjecture", Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 143 (5): 1951–1956, doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-2014-12412-9, MR 3314105
  10. Subjects of Dissertations, Theses and Published Works Presented by Successful Candidates at Examinations for Higher Degrees, University of London, 1937, p. 22 – via Google Books
  11. Burkill, H. (January 1999), "Gordon Marshall Petersen", Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society, 31 (1): 97–107, doi:10.1112/s0024609398005177
  12. Theses and Dissertations Accepted for Higher Degrees, University of London, 1967, p. 42 – via Google Books
  13. Author biography from A Mathematical Spectrum Miscellany: selections from Mathematical Spectrum, 1967–1994, Applied Probability Trust, 2000, p. 3, ISBN 9780902016057