Gregory Freiman
Gregory Abelevich Freiman was a Russian and Israeli mathematician known for his work in additive number theory, in particular, for proving Freiman's theorem. He was a Professor Emeritus in Tel Aviv University.
Biography
Freiman was born in Kazan on 3 July 1926. He graduated from Moscow University in 1949, and obtained his Candidate of Sciences in Kazan University in 1956. From 1956 he worked in Elabuga, and in 1965 he defended his Doctor of Sciences degree under the joint supervision of Alexander Gelfond, Alexey G. Postnikov, and Alexander Buchstab. From 1967 he worked in Vladimir, and later in Kalinin.In the 1970s and early 1980s Freiman participated in the refusenik movement. His samizdat essay It seems I am a Jew, described the discrimination against Jewish mathematicians in the Soviet Union. It was published in the US in 1980.
Later, Freiman was driven out of Russia for his different views. He chose Israel as his new home country, leaving his son, daughter and wife. In Israel he became professor in Tel Aviv University and remarried.
Freiman died on 19 September 2024, at the age of 98.
Selected publications
- with Boris M. Schein:
- with Boris L. Granovsky: