His wife, Ecaterina, was a former student of his; they had for children—two sons and two daughters: Nicolae, Mariana, Florica, and Traian. She died in childbirth in 1921, at age 28.[1][2] In 1920, Lalescu was elected to the Parliament of Romania as deputy for Orșova, and then re-elected twice as deputy for Caransebeș.[2] He presented in parliament a well-received report on the budget project for 1925.[1][2] In the fall of 1927, he caught a double pneumonia; in 1928, he went for a vacation in Nice and for treatment in Paris, but he succumbed to the disease the next year, at age 46.[1] In 1991, he was elected posthumously honorary member of the Romanian Academy.[5]
The Lalescu sequence
In a 1900 issue of Gazeta Matematică [ro], Lalescu proposed the study of the sequence[6]
.
It turns out that the Lalescu sequence is decreasing and bounded below by 0, and thus is converging.[7] Its limit is given by
.
Legacy
There are several institutions bearing his name, including Colegiul Național de Informatică Traian Lalescu in Hunedoara and Liceul Teoretic Traian Lalescu in Reșița. There are also streets named after him in Craiova, Oradea, Reșița, and Timișoara. The National Mathematics Contest Traian Lalescu for undergraduate students is also named after him.
A statue of Lalescu, carved in 1930 by Cornel Medrea, is situated in front of the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, in Timișoara and another statue of Lalescu is situated inside the University of Bucharest.
Traian Lalescu, Introducere la teoria ecuațiilor integrale, Editura Academiei Republicii Populare Romîne, 1956. 134 pp. (A reprint of the first edition [Bucharest, 1911], with a bibliography taken from the French translation [Paris, 1912]). MR0085450