Following his undergraduate degree in Japan, he switched his studies to mathematics, earning a M.Sc. and a Ph.D. from UCLA,[1][2] and eventually became tenured at the University of Saskatchewan, Regina campus in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. Following his retirement in 1997 he was granted the position Professor Emeritus at the University of Regina which is what the Regina campus became in 1974. Subsequently, he further taught at the Tokyo University of Social Welfare from 2000 until 2006, after which he returned to Canada. He died at Ladner, British Columbia on May 28, 2008.
Sato's interests included integer valued entire functions, generalized interpolation by analytic functions, prime representing functions, and function theory. It is in the field of prime representing functions that Sato co-authored a paper with James P. Jones, Hideo Wada, and Douglas Wiens entitled "Diophantine Representation of the Set of Prime Numbers", which won them the Lester R. Ford Award in Mathematics in 1976.[3]
Publications
米田, 信夫; 玉河, 恒夫 (1954). "Mondai to kaito" [Mathematical problem and solutions]. SUGAKU (in Japanese). 6 (3): 190–192. doi:10.11429/sugaku1947.6.190.
増山, 元三郎 (1961). "Mondai to kaito" [Mathematical problem and solutions]. SUGAKU (in Japanese). 13 (2): 125–128. doi:10.11429/sugaku1947.13.125.
Integer valued entire functions. Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles. 1961. OCLC9432394. —Dissertation: Ph.D.
佐藤, 大八郎 (1962). "Mondai to kaito" [Mathematical problem and solutions]. SUGAKU (in Japanese). 14 (2): 95–98. doi:10.11429/sugaku1947.14.95.
佐藤, 大八郎 (1962). "Mondai to kaito" [Mathematical problem and solutions]. SUGAKU (in Japanese). 14 (2): 99–108. doi:10.11429/sugaku1947.14.99.
佐藤, 大八郎 (1963). "Mondai to kaito" [Mathematical problem and solutions]. SUGAKU (in Japanese). 15 (2): 101–105. doi:10.11429/sugaku1947.15.101.
佐藤, 大八郎 (1972). "Mondai to kaito" [Mathematical problem and solutions]. SUGAKU (in Japanese). 24 (3): 223–226. doi:10.11429/sugaku1947.24.223.
三井, 孝美 (1975). "Mondai to kaito" [Mathematical problem and solutions]. SUGAKU (in Japanese). 27 (1): 7–11. doi:10.11429/sugaku1947.27.7.