Type: Article
Publication Date: 1950-01-01
Citations: 113
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1090/s0002-9904-1950-09369-0
Since this is a lecture dedicated to the memory of Josiah Willard Gibbs let me start with that purely mathematical discovery which Gibbs contributed to the theory of Fourier series.Fourier series have to do with the eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of the oldest, simplest, and most important of all spectrum problems, that of the vibrating string.In preparing this lecture, the speaker has assumed that he is expected to talk on a subject in which he had some first-hand experience through his own work.And glancing back over the years he found that the one topic to which he has returned again and again is the problem of eigenvalues and eigenfunctions in its various ramifications.It so happens that right at the beginning of my mathematical career I wrote two papers on what we now call the Gibbs phenomenon.