Misplaced Pages

Eugene Prange

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Eugene August Prange (July 30, 1917 – February 12, 2006) was an American coding theorist, a researcher at the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratory (AFCRL) in Massachusetts who "introduced many of the early fundamental ideas of algebraic coding theory" and was the first to investigate cyclic codes in 1957. With Andrew Gleason, he is the namesake of the Gleason–Prange theorem on the symmetries of the extended quadratic residue code.

Prange was born in Illinois to August Prange and Eugenia Livingston. He graduated from the University of Illinois and spent World War II serving his country in England as an intelligence officer. He then studied at Harvard University before joining AFCRL.

References

  1. U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014
  2. ^ Obituary at legacy.com, accessed 2013-05-05.
  3. Assmus, E. F. Jr. (1983), "Applications of algebraic coding theory to finite geometric problems", Finite geometries (Pullman, Wash., 1981), Lecture Notes in Pure and Appl. Math., vol. 82, New York: Dekker, pp. 23–32, ISBN 978-0-8247-1052-1, MR 0690793
  4. Lin, Shu; Costello, Daniel J. (2004). Error Control Coding. Pearson Education. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-13-042672-7.
  5. Costello, Daniel J. Jr.; Forney, G. David Jr. (2007), "Channel coding: The road to channel capacity", Proceedings of the IEEE, 95 (6): 1150–1177, arXiv:cs.IT/0611112, doi:10.1109/jproc.2007.895188, S2CID 15968912.
  6. Blahut, R. E. (September 2006), "The Gleason-Prange theorem", IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory, 37 (5), Piscataway, NJ, USA: IEEE Press: 1269–1273, doi:10.1109/18.133245.
  7. U.S., Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Church Records, 1781-1969

External links

Categories:
Eugene Prange Add topic