Herman L. Smith
#49,416
Most Influential Person Across History
American mathematician and topologist
Herman L. Smith's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Herman L. Smithmathematics Degrees
Mathematics
#2813
Historical Rank
Topology
#35
Historical Rank
Measure Theory
#4825
Historical Rank

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Mathematics
Herman L. Smith's Degrees
- PhD Mathematics Princeton University
- Masters Mathematics Stanford University
Why Is Herman L. Smith Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Herman Lyle Smith was an American mathematician, the co-discoverer, with E. H. Moore, of netss, and also a discoverer of the related notion of filterss independently of Henri Cartan. Born in Pittwood, Illinois, Smith received his B.S. degree from the University of Oregon in 1914 and his M.S. from the University of Chicago the following year. His Ph.D. was granted in 1926 by the University of Chicago for work done under Moore. He was later employed as a professor of mathematics by Louisiana State University.
Herman L. Smith's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- A General Theory of Limits (1922) (148)
- On the existence of the Stieltjes integral (1925) (24)
- On Continuous Representations of a Square Upon Itself. (1917) (6)
- A Note on a Distance Formula of Plane Analytics (1928) (2)
- On relative content and Green’s lemma (1928) (2)
- The formation of films of lead sulphide on glass surfaces (2)
- A Generalization of Volterra's Derivative. (1923) (1)
- On the Ampere-Cauchy Derived Functions (1923) (1)
- The Circular and Hyperbolic Functions (1)
- On Partial Fractions (1928) (1)
- Notes on the Ampere-Cauchy Derived Functions (1925) (1)
- The Trigonometry Based on a Central Conic (1931) (0)
- On the Inverse Circular Functions (1929) (0)
- The Covariants of a Quadric Surface (1936) (0)
- An Analytic Treatment of Spherical Trigonometry (1933) (0)
- On the Notions of Velocity and of Acceleration (1929) (0)
- A Generalization of Volterras Derivative (0)
- Some notes on paints for compass bowls and discs (1927) (0)
- Deaeration of liquid and semiliquid food products. (1944) (0)
- Note on Parametric Equations of Certain Degenerate Conics (1929) (0)
- On the Definition of the Sum of Two Vectors (1932) (0)
- Device for Testing Refractive Index of Immersion Fluids (0)
- A Theorem on Proportion with Some Applications (1929) (0)
- A Brief Treatment of Analytic Trigonometry (1927) (0)
- A Note on Characteristic Functiollts Which Vanish Identically in an Dh'erval (0)
- The Method of Successive Substitutions (1931) (0)
- Developments in food processing methods. (1945) (0)
- On Simultaneous Algebraic Equations (1932) (0)
- On Certain Useful Functions (0)
- Note on Parametric Equations of the Straight Line (1928) (0)
- A multiple-stage droplet oxygenator. (1959) (0)
- On the Differentiation of Scalar Functions of Vectors (1930) (0)
- A Note on Vectors (1931) (0)
- Note on the production of half-silvered mirrors (1927) (0)
- On the Absolute Maximium of a Function on a Region (1929) (0)
- On Simultaneous Quadratics (0)
- DRY "MOUNTS" FOR THE MICROSCOPE. (0)
- The early days of the sight-saving class. (1950) (0)
- The Straight Line in Plane Analytics (1927) (0)
- Note on a Class of Curious Loci (0)
- Note on the Integration of a Rational Function of Trigonometric Functions and Quadratic Radicals (1931) (0)
- An Application of the Method of Undetermined Coefficients to Symmetric Functions (1932) (0)
- An Application of the Method of Successive Substitutions to an Annuity Problem (1931) (0)
- The Notion of Area of Surface (1931) (0)
- A New Mounting Medium (0)
- On Root Approximation (1943) (0)
- A Problem in Analytic Geometry (1928) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Herman L. Smith?
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