Kunizō Yoneyama (米山 国蔵, 1877–1968) was a Japanese mathematician at Kyoto University working in topology. In 1917, he published the construction of the Lakes of Wada, which he named after his teacher Takeo Wada, to whom he credited the discovery.[1]
Publications
edit- Yoneyama, Kunizô (1917), "Theory of Continuous Set of Points (not finished)", Tôhoku Mathematical Journal, 12: 43–158
- Yoneyama, Kunizô (1918), "Theory of Continuous Set of Points", Tôhoku Mathematical Journal, 13: 33–157
- Yoneyama, Kunizô (1920), "On Continuous Set of Points, II", Tôhoku Mathematical Journal, 18: 134–186
References
edit- ^ Peixoto, Mauricio Matos; Pinto, Alberto Adrego; Rand, David A. (2011). Dynamics, Games and Science I. Springer. p. 441. ISBN 978-3-642-11456-4.
- Mimura, Mamoru (1999), "The Japanese school of topology", in James, I. M. (ed.), History of topology, Amsterdam: North-Holland, pp. 863–882, doi:10.1016/B978-044482375-5/50032-8, ISBN 978-0-444-82375-5, MR 1721126
- Neoi, Makoto (2004), A Study on Educational Viewpoints of a Mathematician Kunizo Yoneyama (in Japanese), Tokyo: Tokai University, p. 12