Saxl published around 100 papers, and according to MathSciNet, these have been cited over 1900 times.[4] He is noted for his work in finite group theory, particularly on permutation groups, and often coauthored with Robert Guralnick, Martin Liebeck, and Cheryl Praeger. Some notable and highly-cited[4] examples of this work are as follows. Liebeck, Saxl and Praeger gave a relatively simple and self-contained proof of the O'Nan–Scott theorem.[5] It had long been known that every maximal subgroup of a symmetric group or alternating group was intransitive, imprimitive, or primitive, and the same authors in 1988 gave a partial description of which primitive subgroups could occur.[6][7]
Personal life
Saxl was married to Cambridge mathematician Ruth M. Williams and they had one daughter, Miriam.[1]
Death
Saxl died on 2 May 2020, after a long period of poor health.[1]
Awards and honors
A three-day conference in the joint honor of Saxl and Martin Liebeck was held at the University of Cambridge in July 2015.[8]
Guralnick, Robert M.; Müller, Peter; Saxl, Jan (2003). "The rational function analogue of a question of Schur and exceptionality of permutation representations". Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society. 162 (773). American Mathematical Society (AMS). arXiv:math/0201069. doi:10.1090/memo/0773. ISBN9780821832882. ISSN0065-9266. MR1955160. S2CID7113361.
Ivanov, Alexander A.; Liebeck, Martin W.; Saxl, Jan, eds. (2003). Groups combinatorics & geometry : Durham 2001. New Jersey London: World Scientific. ISBN981-238-312-3. OCLC228115554.
Liebeck, Martin W.; Saxl, Jan, eds. (1992). Groups, combinatorics & geometry : Durham, 1990. Cambridge England New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0-521-40685-7. OCLC839544039.
Liebeck, Martin W.; Praeger, Cheryl E.; Saxl, Jan (1990). "The maximal factorizations of the finite simple groups and their automorphism groups". Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society. 86 (432). American Mathematical Society (AMS). doi:10.1090/memo/0432. ISBN9780821861554. ISSN0065-9266. MR1016353.