Yael Dowker (nonfiction)

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Yael Naim Dowker.

Yael Naim Dowker (1919-January 2016[citation needed] ) was an Israeli-English mathematician, prominent especially due to her work in the fields of measure theory, ergodic theory and topological dynamics.

Yael Naim (later Dowker) was born in Tel Aviv. She left for the United States to study at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. In 1941, as a graduate student, she met Clifford Hugh Dowker, a Canadian topologist working as an instructor there. The couple married in 1944. From 1943 to 1946 they worked together at the Radiation Laboratory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Clifford also worked as a civilian adviser for the United States Air Force during World War II.

Dowker did her doctorate at Radcliffe College (in Cambridge, Massachusetts) under Witold Hurewicz (known for the Hurewicz theorem). She published her thesis Invariant measure and the ergodic theorems in 1947 and received her Ph.D in 1948. In the period between 1948 and 1949, she did post-doctoral work at the Institute for Advanced Study, located in Princeton, New Jersey. A few years after the war, McCarthyism became a common phenomenon in the academic world, with several of the Dowker couple's friends in the mathematical community harassed and one arrested. In 1950, they emigrated to the United Kingdom.

In 1951 Dowker served as a professor at the University of Manchester, and later went on as a professor at the Imperial College London. While there, among the students she advised was Bill Parry, who published his thesis in 1960. She also cooperated on some of her work with the Hungarian mathematician Paul Erdős (Erdős' number of one). With her husband, she helped educate over thirty gifted children/

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