Otto Albin Frostman (3 January 1907 – 29 December 1977) was a Swedish mathematician, known for his work in potential theory and complex analysis.
Frostman earned his Ph.D. in 1935 at Lund University under the Hungarian-born mathematician Marcel Riesz, the younger brother of Frigyes Riesz. In potential theory, Frostman's lemma is named after him.[1] He supervised the 1971 Stockholm University Ph.D. thesis of Bernt Lindström, which initiated the "Stockholm School" of topological combinatorics (combining simplicial homology and enumerative combinatorics).
^Kjell-Ove Widman (2004). "Household names in Swedish mathematics". EMS Newsletter. 52.
Otto Albin Frostman (3 January 1907 – 29 December 1977) was a Swedish mathematician, known for his work in potential theory and complex analysis. Frostman...
{\displaystyle \mu (B(x,r))\leq r^{s}} holds for all x ∈ Rn and r>0. OttoFrostman proved this lemma for closed sets A as part of his PhD dissertation...
century were Lars Ahlfors, André Bloch, Henri Cartan, Edward Collingwood, OttoFrostman, Frithiof Nevanlinna, Henrik Selberg, Tatsujiro Shimizu, Oswald Teichmüller...
Cramér and Einar Carl Hille. In Lund, Riesz supervised the theses of OttoFrostman, Lars Gårding, Lars Hörmander, and Olof Thorin. Hardy, G. H.; Riesz...
Fenchel Paul Flamant Maurice Fréchet Hans Freudenthal Ragnar Frisch OttoFrostman Rudolf Fueter Fujiwara Matsusaburo Solomon Gandz Alexander Gelfond Harald...
mathematicians of the Soviet Union, on which there were well over 2000 names. OttoFrostman, the Secretary of the IMU, was the editor for the fourth and fifth editions...
Rådström, Germund Dahlquist, and Tord Ganelius were among his students. Frostman, Otto (1953). "Fritz Carlson in memoriam". Acta Math. 90: ix–xii. doi:10.1007/bf02392434...