Klarner was a friend and correspondent of mathematics popularizer Martin Gardner and frequently made contributions to Gardner's Mathematical Games column in Scientific American.[7] He edited a book honoring Gardner on the occasion of his 65th birthday.[8][9] Gardner in turn dedicated his twelfth collection of mathematical games columns to Klarner.[10]
Beginning in 1969 Klarner made significant contributions to the theory of combinatorial enumeration, especially focusing on polyominoes[11] and box-packing.[12][5] Working with Ronald L. Rivest he found upper bounds on the number of n-ominoes.[4] Klarner's Theorem is the statement that an m by n rectangle can be packed with 1-by-x rectangles if and only if x divides one of m and n.[1][13]
He has also published important results in group theory[14] and number theory, in particular working on the Collatz conjecture (sometimes called the 3x + 1 problem).[15] The Klarner-Rado Sequence is named after Klarner and Richard Rado.[2]
Biography
Klarner was born in Fort Bragg, California, and spent his childhood in Napa, California.[7] He married Kara Lynn Klarner in 1961. Their son Carl Eoin Klarner was born on April 21, 1969.[16]
The David A. Klarner Fellowship for Computer Science was set up after Klarner's death by Spyros Magliveras a fellow professor in Computer Science at UNL.[22]
A Lifetime of Puzzles edited by Erik D. Demaine, Martin L. Demaine, Tom Rodgers; pp. 221–225: Satterfield's Tomb, a puzzle by David A. Klarner and Wade Satterfield; ISBN1568812450
Selected publications
Books
The Mathematical Gardner (editor), Publisher: Boston : Prindle, Weber & Schmidt; Belmont, Calif. : Wadsworth International, ISBN0486400891, ISBN9781468466867 (electronic book)[9]
^ abGardner Tribute BooksThe Mathematical Gardner, edited by David A. Klarner "It was quietly assembled behind the scenes, with the assistance of Ron Graham and Don Knuth, as a surprise for Martin to mark his announced retirement from his Scientific American column."
^ ab
Reprinted in 1998 as Mathematical Recreations: A Collection in Honor of Martin Gardner (Dover; ISBN0-486-40089-1), this book, edited by Klarner, was the tribute of the mathematical community to Gardner when he retired from writing his Scientific American column in 1981. Discreetly assembled for the occasion, the stature of the mathematicians submitting papers is a testament to Gardner's importance.
^Erdős, Klarner, and the 3x + 1 Problem by Jeffrey C. Lagarias, The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 123, No. 8, October 2016, pp. 753-776" [This paper describes work of Erdős, Klarner, and Rado on semigroups of integer affine maps and on sets of integers they generate. It gives the history of problems they studied, some solutions, and new unsolved problems that arose from them."]
^Carl is a Political Scientist, receiving tenure at Indiana State University and currently working at the University of Florida as a research associate.
^This is a 2016 revision by Barequet of the chapter of the same title originally written by Klarner for the first edition, and revised by Golomb for the second edition.