Sharadchandra Shankar Shrikhande

Sharadchandra Shankar Shrikhande (19 October 1917 – 21 April 2020) was an Indian mathematician with distinguished and well-recognized achievements in combinatorial mathematics. He was notable for his breakthrough work along with R. C. Bose and E. T. Parker in their disproof of the famous conjecture made by Leonhard Euler dated 1782 that there do not exist two mutually orthogonal latin squares of order 4n + 2 for any n.[1] Shrikhande's specialty was combinatorics, and statistical designs. Shrikhande graph[2] is used in statistical designs.

Sharadchandra S. Shrikhande
Born(1917-10-19)19 October 1917
Sagar, British India
Died21 April 2020
(aged 102)
CitizenshipIndian
Alma materUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Known forEuler's conjecture
Scientific career
FieldsCombinatorics
InstitutionsUniversity of Mumbai,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
Banaras Hindu University
Doctoral advisorRaj Chandra Bose

Shrikhande received a Ph.D. in the year 1950 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill under the direction of R. C. Bose. Shrikhande taught at various universities in the USA and in India.[3] Shrikhande was a professor of mathematics at Banaras Hindu University, Banaras, and the founding head of the department of mathematics, University of Mumbai and the founding director of the Center of Advanced Study in Mathematics, Mumbai until he retired in 1978. He was a fellow of the Indian National Science Academy, the Indian Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, USA.

Shrikhande's son Mohan Shrikhande[4] is a professor of combinatorial mathematics at Central Michigan University in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan.

He turned 100 in October 2017[5] and died in April 2020 at the age of 102.[6]

References

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