The recent question about the most prolific collaboration interested me. How about this question in the opposite direction, then: can anyone beat, amongst contemporary mathematicians, the example of Christopher Hooley, who has written 91 papers and has yet to coauthor a single one (at least if one discounts an obituary written in 1986)?
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Lucien Godeaux wrote more than 600 papers and not one of them is a joint paper. He cowrote a textbook in projective geometry. Mathscinet records only 15 citations to all these papers! But there is something called Godeaux surfaces which is mentioned in the literature. This is about the weirdest example I know. http://www.ams.org/mathscinet/search/author.html?mrauthid=241534 |
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How about Marina Ratner.I believe she has had no collaborators |
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Leopold Vietoris (1891-2002) wrote more than 70 papers, only one of them with a coauthor see here. |
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I always like William Veech (57 papers) although it's unlikely, he will catch up. But his citation count is higher (after mathscinet). |
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This question really troubles me. It's like asking for the name of the smallest iceberg. |
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