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György Komlós

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György Komlós
NameGyörgy Komlós
Birth date1922
Death date1991
Birth placeBudapest
FieldsProbability theory, Statistics
WorkplacesHungarian Academy of Sciences, New York University, Rutgers University
Alma materEötvös Loránd University, University of Szeged
Known forKomlós–Major–Tusnády theorem, concentration inequalities

György Komlós was a Hungarian-born mathematician and statistician whose work in probability theory and asymptotic analysis influenced Paul Erdős, André Weil, Pál Erdős, Alfréd Rényi, Imre Lakatos and generations of probabilists at institutions such as New York University, Rutgers University, Hungarian Academy of Sciences and Eötvös Loránd University. His research, particularly on strong approximation, limit theorems, and combinatorial probability, linked traditions from Central European University-era Hungarian mathematics to postwar American probability schools including the Institute for Advanced Study and the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. Colleagues and students placed his results alongside foundational contributions by Andrey Kolmogorov, William Feller, Kolmogorov–Smirnov test, and Sergei Bernstein.

Early life and education

Born in Budapest during the interwar period, he studied in academic environments shaped by figures such as John von Neumann and László Rátz and was influenced by the mathematical cultures of Eötvös Loránd University and University of Szeged. His formative years intersected with contemporaries like Paul Turán and Alfréd Rényi, and he trained under instructors connected to the legacy of Pólya, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and Bolyai Institute. Exposure to problems arising in the work of André Kolmogorov, Richard von Mises, William Feller, and Khinchin shaped his attention to limit theorems, characteristic functions, and empirical processes.

Academic career and positions

Komlós held positions in Hungary before emigrating and taking appointments in the United States, collaborating with institutions such as New York University, Rutgers University, Columbia University, and visiting the Institute for Advanced Study. He participated in seminars and workshops alongside scholars from Princeton University, Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, building links to researchers like János Aczél, Elliott H. Lieb, Endre Szemerédi, and Miklós Schweitzer. His appointments involved collaborative networks that included the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the American Mathematical Society, and conferences organized by the International Statistical Institute and the Bernoulli Society.

Research contributions and legacy

Komlós produced seminal results on strong approximations and almost sure invariance principles, culminating in the Komlós–Major–Tusnády type approximations that relate empirical processes to Brownian motion, Wiener process, and Gaussian processes. His theorems connected to work by Boris Gnedenko, Andrey Kolmogorov, Paul Lévy, and Norbert Wiener and influenced developments in empirical process theory by David Pollard, Vladimir Prokhorov, Robert Serfling, and Evarist Giné. He made substantial contributions to combinatorial probability and random structures, engaging problems treated by Paul Erdős, Endre Szemerédi, László Lovász, and Jeff Kahn. Applications of his results appeared in research linked to Statistical Physics, Random Matrix Theory, and theoretical aspects studied by Persi Diaconis, Terence Tao, and Richard Stanley.

His methods exploited coupling techniques, martingale approximations, and maximal inequalities with roots traceable to Doob, Joseph L. Doob, Kolmogorov's inequality, and later refinements by Azuma–Hoeffding style results. This lineage influenced modern probabilists including Michel Ledoux, Sourav Chatterjee, Rademacher, and researchers in concentration of measure such as Miklós Talagrand and Giuseppe Toscani.

Honors and awards

Komlós received recognition from national and international scientific bodies connected to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the American Mathematical Society, and was invited to lecture at meetings of the International Mathematical Union and the International Congress of Mathematicians. His work earned him invitations to named lectureships and memorial sessions alongside prize recipients such as Paul Erdős Prize winners and contributors to lists maintained by the Mathematical Reviews and the Zentralblatt MATH. His legacy is commemorated in seminars and special issues honoring probabilists including László Révész and Endre Szász.

Selected publications and influence

Key papers by Komlós were published in venues associated with Acta Mathematica Hungarica, Annals of Probability, Journal of the American Statistical Association, and collections from conferences at Princeton University Press and Springer-Verlag. Notable collaborations include those with János Major and Gábor Tusnády, which produced results frequently cited alongside works by Kolmogorov, Smirnov, Strassen, and Csörgő. His publications influenced textbooks and monographs by Billingsley, Durrett, Shorack, and Wellner, and informed statistical methodology used by researchers affiliated with Bell Labs, IBM Research, and academic groups at Stanford University and University of California, Berkeley.

Selected items: - Papers with János Major and Gábor Tusnády on strong approximation and empirical processes. - Contributions to combinatorial probability cited in works by Paul Erdős and Endre Szemerédi. - Methodological influence on monographs by David Pollard and Miklós Csörgő.

Category:Hungarian mathematicians Category:Probability theorists Category:1922 births Category:1991 deaths