Re: Jens-Peer Kuska passed away
- To: mathgroup at smc.vnet.net
- Subject: [mg101687] Re: Jens-Peer Kuska passed away
- From: Hannes <HannesKessler at hushmail.com>
- Date: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 05:36:49 -0400 (EDT)
- References: <64107.76.247.166.94.1246854595.squirrel@webmail.wolfram.com>
A very sad moment when I read that news. Jens was a great Mathematica expert and a great scientist. I feel with his family and friends. On 7 Jul., 11:03, mtr... at wolfram.com wrote: > Dear Mathgroup, > > I am sorry to inform you that Jens-Peer Kuska passed away last week. > He was 45 years old. > > I have known Jens-Peer since the early 80s when we both studied physics > at the Humboldt University in Berlin. Our departments were on opposite > sides of the first floor hallway. > > After Germany's reunification and the availability of more computers > and software, Jens-Peer's favorite program soon become Mathematica. > And he evolved to be a true expert of it. > > His broad and detailed mathematics and physics knowledge allowed > Jens to cover new areas in computer graphics with his OpenGL viewer > and in his work on medical image processing. > > Most of the Mathgroup readers know Jens-Peer from his short, to the point, > helpful, stimulating contributions to Mathgroup, where he contributed so > many times for more than 10 years. > > http://groups.google.com/groups/profile?enc_user=OYlIrx8AAACUxZjYdkFu.. . > > And the German-speaking Mathematica user knew him additionally from his > many contribution to the German Mathematica user group: > > http://www.google.com/#q=Jens-Peer+Kuska+site:www.mathematica.ch&hl=e ... > > Jens-Peer was a brilliant Mathematica (and in general) programmer who > was able to code complicated algorithms efficiently and elegantly. His > reservoir of ideas what to implement, calculate, investigate, or > visualize was virtually unlimited. > > For the ones that were fortunate to know him in person and discuss > Mathematica, mathematics, physics, or image-processing issues with him, > know the value of his deep, critical, and constructive opinions and > contributions. > He loved to discuss so many different topics, ranging from Fullform[]s of > Mathematica graphics expressions to shape-characteristics of averaged > Wigner functions of quantum systems and the use of partial differential > equations to image processing tasks. > We all will miss such discussions with him in the future. > > Jens-Peer will be missed by the Mathematica community, his university > department > (http://www.izbi.uni-leipzig.de/englisch/izbi/mitarbeiter/kuska.php), > his former students, his friends, and of course, his family. > > Michael Trott > Wolfram Research