Frederick Shenstone Woods (1864–1950) was an American mathematician.

He was a part of the mathematics faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1895 to 1934,[1] being head of the department of mathematics from 1930 to 1934[2] and chairman of the MIT faculty from 1931 to 1933.[3]

His textbook on analytic geometry in 1897 was reviewed by Maxime Bocher.[4]

In 1901 he wrote on Riemannian geometry and curvature of Riemannian manifolds. In 1903 he spoke on non-Euclidean geometry.

Works

Non-Euclidean geometry

Further information: History of Lorentz transformations

Following Wilhelm Killing (1885) and others, Woods described motions in spaces of non-Euclidean geometry in the form:[5]

which becomes a Lorentz boost by setting , as well as general motions in hyperbolic space[6]

Notes

  1. ^ "Faculty - MIT Mathematics". math.mit.edu.
  2. ^ "Facts - MIT Mathematics". math.mit.edu.
  3. ^ "MIT History - MIT Faculty". libraries.mit.edu.
  4. ^ Maxime Bocher (1897) Review of Plane and Solid Analytic geometry via Project Euclid
  5. ^ Woods (1903/05), p. 55
  6. ^ Woods (1903/05), p. 72