Robert Hjalmar Mellin (19 June 1854 – 5 April 1933) was a Finland mathematician and function theorist.[Mellin-Barnes,2022]
Biography
Mellin was born on June 19, 1854 to priest and a former teacher Gustaf Robert Mellin (1826-1880) and Sofia Augusta Thérmen (1821-1888) in
Liminka,
Finland. He was the oldest among his four siblings, He worked as a translator of his father's religious and literary works after his father's expulsion from the priesthood in 1866 because of his heavy drinking, although he was suspended in 1864 because of the same reason. Hjarmar's mother Sofia was the sister of the former Councilor of State, Karl Otto Themén (1818-1893).
Mellin studied at the University of Helsinki and later in
Berlin under
Karl Weierstrass.
He is chiefly remembered as the developer of the integral transform known as the
Mellin transform. He studied related
, hypergeometric functions,
Dirichlet series and the Riemann ζ function. He was appointed professor at the Polytechnic Institute in Helsinki, which later became Helsinki University of Technology with Mellin as first rector.
Later in his career Mellin also became known for his critical opposition to the theory of relativity; he published several papers in which he argued against the theory from a chiefly philosophical standpoint. In his private life he was known as an outspoken fennoman: a proponent of adopting Finnish language as the language of state and culture in the Grand Duchy of Finland, in preference to Swedish language, which had predominantly been used hitherto.
See also
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