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  1. Alexandra Bellow (née Bagdasar; previously Ionescu Tulcea; born 30 August 1935) is a Romanian-American mathematician, who has made contributions to the fields of ergodic theory, probability and analysis.

  2. 2 giorni fa · Home. Faculty Profiles. Alexandra Bellow, PhD. Mathematics Department, 1968 -1996. Alexandra Bellow ( 1935-present) of the mathematics department was born in Bucharest, Romania in 1935. There, her father founded the first clinic of neurosurgery in while her mother was a pioneer in child neuropsychiatry. Dr.

  3. Interview with Alexandra Bellow by Niki Koumoutsos. Born in Bucharest, Romania in 1935, Alexandra Bellow received her PhD from Yale in 1959. She went on to a distinguished career working in ergodic theory and probability. Now Professor Emeritus of Northwestern University’s Department of Mathematics, she has endowed an annual lecture called ...

  4. Alexandra Bellow. 1935-. Born in Bucharest, Romania. Received her Ph.D. from Yale in 1959 with a dissertation on Ergodic Theory of Random Series. Worked in the area of ergodic theory and probability. Became the first woman full professor of mathematics at Northwestern University in 1968, and retired as Professor Emeritus in 1996 after a ...

  5. Alexandra Bellow. Born: 30 August 1935, Romania. Died: NA. Country most active: United States. Also known as: Alexandra Bagdasar. Born in Bucharest to neuropsychiatrist Florica Bagdasar (the country’s first woman minister), Alexandra Bellow emigrated to the U.S. after completing her Master’s in mathematics at the University of Bucharest in ...

  6. Alexandra Bellow. 1943-. Romanian-American mathematician known for her work in Ergodic theory, harmonic analysis, and number theory. She graduated from the University of Bucharest in 1957 before traveling to the United States with permission of the then-Communist regime.

  7. 2023-2024 Alexandra Bellow Distinguished Lecture Series. The 2023-2024 Bellow Lecturer, Michael Harris of Columbia University, will give his talk-- "L-functions, Galois Representations, and the Langlands Program"-- on May 15-17, 2024. 2024-2025 Alexandra Bellow Distinguished Lecture Series