John William Theodore Youngs
#55,932
Most Influential Person Across History
American mathematician
John William Theodore Youngs's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
John William Theodore Youngsmathematics Degrees
Mathematics
#2746
Historical Rank
Complex Analysis
#43
Historical Rank
Group Theory
#276
Historical Rank
Number Theory
#419
Historical Rank

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Mathematics
John William Theodore Youngs's Degrees
- Masters Mathematics Stanford University
- PhD Mathematics Princeton University
Why Is John William Theodore Youngs Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, John William Theodore Youngs was an American mathematician. Youngs was the son of a missionary. He completed his undergraduate study at Wheaton College and received his PhD from Ohio State University in 1934 under Tibor Radó. He then taught for 18 years at Indiana University, where for eight years he was chair of the mathematics department. From 1964 he was a professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where he developed the mathematics faculty and was chair of the academic senate of the university.
John William Theodore Youngs'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
- Solution of the heawood map-coloring problem. (1968) (338)
- On surfaces of class $K_1$ (1945) (48)
- The symmetrization of matrices by diagonal matrices (1962) (41)
- Homeomorphic approximations to monotone mappings (1948) (39)
- The Topological Theory of Frechet Surfaces (1944) (36)
- Solution of the heawood map-coloring problem—Cases 3, 5, 6, and 9 (1970) (28)
- The genus of K12s (1967) (28)
- Solution of the Heawood map-coloring problem—case 11 (1969) (26)
- The heawood map-coloring problem—Cases 1, 7, and 10 (1970) (16)
- Solution of the heawood map-coloring problem—Case 2 (1969) (15)
- Solution of the heawood map-coloring problem—Case 4 (1970) (13)
- The nonorientable genus of $K_n$ (1968) (12)
- The representation problem for Fréchet surfaces (1951) (10)
- Remarks on the Heawood conjecture (nonorientable case) (1968) (10)
- A note on separation axioms and their application in the theory of a locally connected topological space (1943) (9)
- Curves and Surfaces (1944) (9)
- Solution of the heawood map-coloring problem—Case 8 (1969) (8)
- Smooth solutions in Case 1 of the Heawood conjecture for non-orientable surfaces (1972) (8)
- A Lemma on Squares (1939) (8)
- November meeting in Evanston (1961) (8)
- A smooth and unified proof of cases 6, 5 and 3 of the ringel-youngs theorem (1973) (8)
- The genus of $K_n ,n = 12s$ (1965) (6)
- The extension of a homeomorphism defined on the boundary of a 2-manifold (1948) (5)
- The genus of $K_n ,n = 12\left( {2^m } \right)$ (1965) (5)
- The structure of locally connected topological spaces (1942) (4)
- PROOF OF THE HEAWOOD CONJECTURE FOR NON-ORIENTABLE SURFACES, (1970) (3)
- Comments on the Cores of Certain Classes of Spaces (1947) (3)
- K-Cyclic Elements (1940) (3)
- The additivity of the Lebesgue area (1943) (3)
- A Reduction Theorem Concerning the Representation Problem for Fréchet Varieties. (1946) (3)
- Topological methods in the theory of Lebesgue area (1950) (2)
- The November meeting in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (1962) (1)
- The November meeting in Madison (1964) (1)
- Remarks on cyclic additivity (1949) (1)
- Annual Meeting of the Society (1938) (1)
- The November meeting in Iowa City (1955) (1)
- The November meeting in Lafayette (1953) (0)
- The summer meeting in Stillwater (1961) (0)
- The annual meeting in St. Louis (1953) (0)
- The November meeting in Chicago (1949) (0)
- The summer meeting in Minneapolis (1951) (0)
- The annual meeting in Cincinnati (1958) (0)
- Remarks on Analyticity and Integration (1947) (0)
- The November meeting in Norman (1952) (0)
- REMARKS ON THE GENUS OF A COMPLETE GRAPH (1961) (0)
- The April meeting in Chicago (1944) (0)
- The November meeting in Detroit (1960) (0)
- The February meeting in East Lansing (1950) (0)
- Lebesgue, Frechet and Kerekjarto Varieties (1948) (0)
- The Formative Years: A Critical Review of Audio-Visual Aids for Teaching American History, 1607-1789. (1976) (0)
- The February meeting in Cincinnati (1951) (0)
- Review: T. Radó and P. V. Reichelderfer, Continuous transformations in analysis (1962) (0)
- The November meeting in Columbia (1958) (0)
- The April meeting in Lawrence (1949) (0)
- The November meeting in Milwaukee (1956) (0)
- The summer meeting in ann Arbor (1955) (0)
- No Four-Color Solution (1968) (0)
- An axiomatic characterization of the reduced homology theory (1960) (0)
- The February meeting in Chicago (1949) (0)
- The Summer meeting in East Lansing (1960) (0)
- Educational Films and the Historian. (1975) (0)
- Third Symposium on Applied Mathematics (1949) (0)
- Annual meeting houston. (1956) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With John William Theodore Youngs?
John William Theodore Youngs is affiliated with the following schools: