Awards & Winners

R. H. Bruck

Date of Birth 26-December-1914
Place of Birth United States of America
(Americas, DVD Region 1, United States, with Territories, Lacks Family Cemetery )
Nationality United States of America
Also know as Richard Bruck
Profession Mathematician, Professor
Richard Hubert Bruck was an American mathematician best known for his work in the field of algebra, especially in its relation to projective geometry and combinatorics. Bruck studied at the University of Toronto, where he received his doctorate in 1940 under the supervision of Richard Brauer. He spent most his career as a professor at University of Wisconsin–Madison, advising at least 31 doctoral students. He is best known for his 1949 paper coauthored with H. J. Ryser; the results of which became known as the Bruck–Ryser theorem concerning the possible orders of finite projective planes. In 1946, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. In 1956, he was awarded the Chauvenet Prize for his article Recent Advances in the Foundations of Euclidean Plane Geometry. In 1962, he was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Stockholm. In 1963, he was a Fulbright Lecturer at the University of Canberra. In 1965 a Groups and Geometry conference was held at the University of Wisconsin in honor of Bruck's retirement. "Dick" Bruck and his wife Helen were supporters of the fine arts. They were patrons of the regional American Players Theatre in Wisconsin.

Awards by R. H. Bruck

Check all the awards nominated and won by R. H. Bruck.

1956


Chauvenet Prize
(For his article Recent Advances in the Foundations of Euclidean Plane Geometry.)