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'''William T. Tutte'''.
'William Thomas Tutte' (
May 14 1917 –
May 2 2002) was a
British, later Canadian,
codebreaker and
mathematician. During
World War II he broke a major German code system, which had a significant impact on the Allied invasion of Europe. He also had a number of significant mathematical accomplishments, including foundation work in the fields of
combinatorics and
graph theory.
Tutte was born in
Newmarket in
Suffolk, the son of a
gardener. At age 18 he studied
chemistry at
Trinity College,
Cambridge University. As a student he worked on the problem of
squaring the square.
On the outbreak of
World War II, his tutor suggested he join the
Government Code and Cipher School, which he did in May
1941. Tutte worked at
Bletchley Park as a codebreaker, and in a feat described as "one of the greatest intellectual feats
of World War II" he was able to deduce the structure of the German
Lorenz SZ 40/42 encryption machine (codenamed ''Tunny''), used for high-level German Army communications, using only a number of intercepted encrypted messages. Using his breakthrough, the British constructed an entire organization (including the famed
Colossus computer) to read the messages sent in this system.
In
1948, Tutte received a doctorate in mathematics from Cambridge under the supervision of
Shaun Wylie, who had also worked at Bletchley Park on Tunny. From 1948-
1962 he taught mathematics at the
University of Toronto. A majority of his later work was done at the
University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Canada, which he joined in 1962, and where he stayed until
1985. Tutte was instrumental in helping to found the
Department of Combinatorics and Optimization at the University of Waterloo.
His mathematical career concentrated on
combinatorics, especially
graph theory, which he is credited as having helped create in its modern form, and
matroid theory, to which he made profound contributions; one colleague described him as "the leading mathematician in combinatorics for three decades". He was editor in chief of ''The Journal of Combinatorial Theory'' when it was started, and served on the editorial boards of several other mathematical research journals.
His work in graph theory includes the structure of cycle and cut spaces, size of
maximum matchings and existence of
''k''-factors in graphs, and
Hamiltonian and non-Hamiltonian graphs.
He disproved
Tait's conjecture using the construction known as
Tutte's fragment. The eventual proof of the
four color theorem made use of his earlier work. The graph polynomial he called the "dichromate" has become famous and influential under the name ''
Tutte polynomial'' and serves as the prototype of combinatorial invariants that are universal for all invariants that satisfy a specified reduction law.
In matroid theory he discovered the highly sophisticated
homotopy theorem as well as founding the studies of
chain groups and
regular matroids, about which he proved deep results.
He was a
Fellow of the Royal Society of London, and of the
Royal Society of Canada. In October,
2001 he was inducted as an Officer of the
Order of Canada.
See also
★
Tutte theorem
★
Tutte eight cage
★
Tutte polynomial
★
Systolic geometry
References
★ Brooks, R. L.; Smith, C. A. B.; Stone, A. H.; and Tutte, W. T. "The Dissection of Rectangles into Squares." ''Duke Math. J.'' 7, 312-340, 1940
External links
★
Professor William T. Tutte
★
A Tribute to William Thomas Tutte: Mathematician and Cryptographer
★ Hobbs, Arthur and Oxley, James;
William T. Tutte (1917-2002), ''Notices of the American Mathematical Society''; vol. 51, no. 3 (March 2004).
★
★
★
William Tutte, 84, Mathematician and Code-breaker, Dies - Obituary from
The New York Times
★
William Tutte: Unsung mathematical mastermind - Obituary from
The Guardian
★
CRM-Fields-PIMS Prize - 2001 - William T. Tutte
★
Tutte's paper on the Fish cipher
★
Tutte's disproof of Tait's conjecture