Math ability is passed from parent to child1 with the most famous example being the Bernoulli family.2 This second generation phenomenon also holds in physics3 but in that field the Nobel Prize in Physics gives a tool for tracking it, since it has been given out for more than 120 years, and there are on average more than two Nobel Prizes in Physics given each year.4 There is no comparable award in mathematics5 but perusing (for example) the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive6 list of biographies enables the construction of a similar list of notable two-generation pairs of mathematicians.
The following is a list of parent-child pairs who both made contributions to mathematics significant enough to be noted in the citation for a prestigious prize, in an obituary in a major math journal, or in a similarly authoritative source. All are father-son except for Emmy Noether and Cathleen Morawetz. The list is in chronological order by birth date of the parent.
List
References
References
- "Parents' math skills 'rub off' on their children". Retrieved 2025-04-09.
- "The Bountiful Bernoullis of Basel". 6 October 2020. Retrieved 2025-04-09.
- "4 Father-Son Nobel Prize Winners In Physics". Retrieved 2025-04-09.
- "The Nobel Prize in Physics". Retrieved 2025-04-09.
- "No Nobel Prize for Math". 2 March 2001. Retrieved 2025-04-09.
- "MacTutor". Retrieved 2025-04-09.
- "2004 Steele Prizes" (PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 51 (4): 424. April 2004.