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  1. Alberto Pedro Calderón (September 14, 1920 – April 16, 1998) was an Argentine mathematician. His name is associated with the University of Buenos Aires , but first and foremost with the University of Chicago , where Calderón and his mentor, the analyst Antoni Zygmund , developed the theory of singular integral operators .

  2. Apr 16, 1998 · Alberto Calderón was an Argentinian mathematician who cooperated with Zygmund to found the Chicago school of "hard analysis".

  3. CALDERóN, ALBERTO PEDRO (b. Mendoza, Argentina, 14 September 1920; d. Chicago, Illinois, 16 April 1998), mathematics, analysis, partial differential equations, singular integrals. Calderón was one of the most original mathematicians of the twentieth century.

  4. Alberto Pedro Calderón (September 14, 1920 – April 16, 1998) was an Argentine mathematician. His name is associated with the University of Buenos Aires , but first and foremost with the University of Chicago , where Calderón and his mentor, the analyst Antoni Zygmund , developed the theory of singular integral operators .

  5. Dec 30, 1998 · Alberto Calderón, one of the twentieth century's greatest mathematicians, died on 16 April this year after a brief illness. He was 77. Calderón was a pioneer in the areas of Fourier analysis...

    • Robert A. Fefferman
    • 1998
  6. Alberto P. Calderon was awarded the National Medal of Science for his ground-breaking work on singular integral operators leading to their application to important problems in partial differential equations, including his proof of uniqueness in the Cauchy problem, the Atiyah-Singer index theorem and the propagation of singularities of non ...

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  8. Instead, a distinguished-looking gentleman entered and quietly announced, “I am Alberto Calderón,” substituting for Zygmund. The simple greeting still resonates in memory; its tone was not that of a teacher addressing a class, but of a man addressing colleagues.

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