Namioka was born in Tōno, not far from Namioka in the north of Honshu, Japan. When he was young his parents moved farther south, to Himeji.[4]
He attended graduate school at the University of California, Berkeley, earning a doctorate in 1956 under the supervision of John L. Kelley.[5] As a graduate student, Namioka married Chinese-American mathematics student Lensey Namioka, later to become a well-known novelist who used Namioka's Japanese heritage in some of her novels.[4]
Namioka's book Linear Topological Spaces with Kelley has become a "standard text".[1] Although his doctoral work and this book both concerned general topology, his interests later shifted to functional analysis.[6]
Following his 1974 paper "separate continuity and joint continuity", a Namioka space has come to mean a topological space X with the property that whenever Y is a compact space and function f from the Cartesian product of X and Y to Z is separately continuous in X and Y, there must exist a denseGδ set within X whose Cartesian product with Y is a subset of the set of points of continuity of f.[8][9] The result of the 1974 paper, a proof of this property for a specific class of topological spaces, has come to be known as Namioka's theorem.[10]
In 1975, Namioka and Phelps established one side of the theorem that a space is an Asplund space if and only if its dual space has the Radon–Nikodým property. The other side was completed in 1978 by Stegall.[11]
Namioka, I.; Asplund, E. (1967), "A geometric proof of Ryll-Nardzewski's fixed point theorem", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 73 (3): 443–445, doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1967-11779-8, MR0209904.
Namioka, I. (1974), "Separate continuity and joint continuity", Pacific Journal of Mathematics, 51 (2): 515–531, doi:10.2140/pjm.1974.51.515, MR0370466.
Namioka, I.; Phelps, R. R. (1975), "Banach spaces which are Asplund spaces", Duke Mathematical Journal, 42 (4): 735–750, doi:10.1215/s0012-7094-75-04261-1, MR0390721.
^West, T. T. (December 1964), "Kelley, J. L., Namioka, I., and others, Linear Topological Spaces", Book Reviews, Proceedings of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society, Series 2, 14 (2): 168, doi:10.1017/S0013091500025931, S2CID123043619.