Emanuel Sperner
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters". Emanuel Sperner (9 December 1905 – 31 January 1980) was a German mathematician, best known for two theorems. He was born in Waltdorf (near Neiße, Upper Silesia, now Nysa, Poland), and died in Sulzburg-Laufen, West Germany. He was a student at Carolinum in Nysa and then Hamburg University where his advisor was Wilhelm Blaschke. He was appointed Professor in Königsberg in 1934, and subsequently held posts in a number of universities until 1974.
Sperner's theorem, from 1928, says that the size of an antichain in the power set of an n-set (a Sperner family) is at most the middle binomial coefficient(s).[1] It has several proofs and numerous generalizations, including the Sperner property of a partially ordered set.
Sperner's lemma, from 1928, states that every Sperner coloring of a triangulation of an n-dimensional simplex contains a cell colored with a complete set of colors.[2] It was proven by Sperner to provide an alternate proof of a theorem of Lebesgue characterizing dimensionality of Euclidean spaces. It was later noticed that this lemma provides a direct proof of the Brouwer fixed-point theorem without explicit use of homology.[3]
Sperner's students included Kurt Leichtweiss and Gerhard Ringel.
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- Pages with script errors
- 1905 births
- 1980 deaths
- People from Nysa County
- People from the Province of Silesia
- 20th-century German mathematicians
- Combinatorialists
- Kolegium Carolinum Neisse alumni
- University of Freiburg alumni
- Academic staff of the University of Freiburg
- University of Hamburg alumni
- Academic staff of the University of Hamburg
- Academic staff of the University of Königsberg
- Academic staff of the University of Strasbourg
- Academic staff of the University of Bonn
- Presidents of the German Mathematical Society