Keith William Morton
British mathematician
Keith William Morton (born 28 May 1930, Ipswich, Suffolk, England) is a British mathematician working on partial differential equations, and their numerical analysis.
He obtained his Ph.D. in 1964 under the supervision of Harold Grad at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences of New York University.[1]
In 2010, he was awarded the De Morgan Medal.[2]
References
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De Morgan Medallists
- Arthur Cayley (1884)
- James Joseph Sylvester (1887)
- Lord Rayleigh (1890)
- Felix Klein (1893)
- S. Roberts (1896)
- William Burnside (1899)
- A. G. Greenhill (1902)
- H. F. Baker (1905)
- J. W. L. Glaisher (1908)
- Horace Lamb (1911)
- J. Larmor (1914)
- W. H. Young (1917)
- E. W. Hobson (1920)
- P. A. MacMahon (1923)
- A. E. H. Love (1926)
- Godfrey Harold Hardy (1929)
- Bertrand Russell (1932)
- E. T. Whittaker (1935)
- J. E. Littlewood (1938)
- Louis Mordell (1941)
- Sydney Chapman (1944)
- George Neville Watson (1947)
- A. S. Besicovitch (1950)
- E. C. Titchmarsh (1953)
- G. I. Taylor (1956)
- W. V. D. Hodge (1959)
- Max Newman (1962)
- Philip Hall (1965)
- Mary Cartwright (1968)
- Kurt Mahler (1971)
- Graham Higman (1974)
- C. Ambrose Rogers (1977)
- Michael Atiyah (1980)
- K. F. Roth (1983)
- J. W. S. Cassels (1986)
- D. G. Kendall (1989)
- Albrecht Fröhlich (1992)
- W. K. Hayman (1995)
- R. A. Rankin (1998)
- J. A. Green (2001)
- Roger Penrose (2004)
- Bryan John Birch (2007)
- Keith William Morton (2010)
- John Griggs Thompson (2013)
- Timothy Gowers (2016)
- Andrew Wiles (2019)
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