Fefferman Biography of charles fefferman (19490BC) charles fefferman has made enormouslyimportant contributions to the study of the Bergman kernel and has http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Version for printing Charles Fefferman was a child prodigy. It is claimed that he had mastered the calculus before the age of twelve. Fefferman entered the University of Maryland when he was very young and in 1966, at the age of 17, he graduated with the highest distinction. After graduating Fefferman undertook postgraduate work at Princeton University supervised by Elias Stein. He was awarded his PhD in 1969 for a thesis entitled Inequalities for Strongly Regular Convolution Operators. He lectured at Princeton for the years 1969-70. He moved to the University of Chicago in 1970 and, one year later in 1971, he was promoted to full professor there, earning him the distinction of becoming the youngest full professor ever appointed in the United States. In 1973 Fefferman returned to Princeton and, in 1984, he was appointed Herbert Jones Professor at Princeton. In 1976 he was awarded the Alan T Waterman Award, being the first mathematician to receive such an award.
References For Fefferman References for the biography of charles fefferman. Bergman Prize awarded tocharles fefferman, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 39 (4) (1992), 320321. http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Printref/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Bergman Prize awarded to Charles Fefferman, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. L Carleson, The work of Charles Fefferman, Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Helsinki 1978 (Helsinki, 1980), 53-56. S D Chatterji, On the mathematical work of Charles Fefferman, (Mannheim, 1979), 157-164. S Igari, Works of C Fefferman I (Japanese), Sugaku I Naruki, Works of C Fefferman II (Japanese), Sugaku J Moser, Fields medals III : A broad attack on analysis problems, Science April 1998 MacTutor History of Mathematics
MathNet-Fields Medals Bergman Prize awarded to charles fefferman, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 39 (4) (1992),320321. 2.L Carleson, The work of charles fefferman, Proceedings of the http://www.mathnet.or.kr/API/?MIval=people_fields_detail&ln=Charles Louis Feffer
AIM Reprint Library: Listing for fefferman, charles. Viewing Page 1. 1. Ambient Metric Construction of 2. Conformal Invarients fefferman, charles Graham, C. Robin http://www.aimath.org/library/library.cgi?database=reprints;mode=display;BrowseT
Journées EDP - 1995 fefferman, charles L.; Seco, Luis A. The mathematics of large atoms, 1995, 12 p.Article Analyses MR 1360480. Bibliographie http://www.math.sciences.univ-nantes.fr/edpa/CDROM/data/1995/A11.htm
Charles Fefferman Encyclopedia charles feffermanOther descriptions of charles fefferman. charles Louis fefferman (born April 18,1949) is a renowned mathematician at Princeton University. http://scidiv.bcc.ctc.edu/math/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Mathematics, music and chess seem to be the only fields in which true prodigies occur. Before he was 12 years old, Fefferman had guided tours at the Smithsonian, acted as a trouble-shooter for an auto mechanic, and mastered calculus. By 17 he had graduated with high honors from the University of Maryland, and at 20 he earned his Ph.D. from Princeton. At 22 the newly bearded "Charlie" became a full professor at the University of Chicago. By the time he was 24, he completed the work that earned him a Fields Medal (awarded every 4 years to a mathematician under 40) and a host of other honors. Fefferman's meteoric climb to prominence is not typical of even first-rate minds in any field. Fefferman enjoys playing chess ("I'm very bad like lots of distinguished mathematicians I know."), and he loves to sing along with classical music. He has even dabbled in a couple of presidential campaigns. Mostly, though, he wants "to do what all mathematicians do try to prove [new] theorems." He is also serious about teaching and is known for his ability to explain complicated ideas very simply. He has acquired the affectionate reputation of being an absent-minded professor, occasionally getting tricked into divulging test answers prematurely. He confesses that teaching saps a lot of his creative energy: "I'm psyched up about that, not the problem I'm trying to solve."
Encyclopedia: Fields Medal charles Louis fefferman (born April 18, 1949) is a renowned mathematician atPrinceton. Gregori Aleksandrovich Margulis (first name often given as http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Fields-Medal
Extractions: Related Articles People who viewed "Fields Medal" also viewed: Fields medal Nobel laureate List of prizes Abel Prize ... Real number line What's new? Our next offering Latest newsletter Student area Lesson plans Recent Updates Eight ball Eigenvalue, eigenvector, and eigenspace Eidetic memory EDSAC ... More Recent Articles Top Graphs Richest Most Murderous Most Taxed Most Populous ... More Stats Updated 49 days 12 hours 9 minutes ago. Other descriptions of Fields Medal The Fields Medal is a prize awarded to up to four mathematicians (not over forty years of age) at each International Congress of International Mathematical Union , since and regularly since at the initiative of the Canadian mathematician John Charles Fields . The purpose is to give recognition and support to young mathematical researchers having already made important contributions. A mathematician is a person whose area of study and research is mathematics. ... The International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM) is the biggest congress in mathematics. ... The International Mathematical Union is an international non-governmental organization devoted to international cooperation in the field of mathematics. ...
Fields Medal Pierre Brussels Belgium 33 1978 fefferman, charles Washington DC USA 29 Pierre IHES France 1978 fefferman, charles Princeton University USA 1978 http://db.uwaterloo.ca/~alopez-o/math-faq/mathtext/node19.html
Extractions: Next: Erdos Number Up: Human Interest Previous: Indiana bill sets the This is the original letter by Fields creating the endowment for the medals that bear his name. It is thought to have been written during the few months before his death. Notice that no mention is made about the age of the recipients (currently there is a 40 year-old limit), and that the medal should not be attached to any person, private or public, meaning that it shouldn't bear anybody's name. It is proposed to found two gold medals to be awarded at successive International Mathematical Congress for outstanding achievements in mathematics. Because of the multiplicity of the branches of mathematics and taking into account the fact that the interval between such congresses is four years it is felt that at least two medals should be available. The awards would be open to the whole world and would be made by an International Committee. The fund for the founding of the medals is constituted by balance left over after financing the Toronto congress held in 1924. This must be held in trust by the Government or by some body authorized by government to hold and invest such funds. It would seem that a dignified method for handling the matter and one which in this changing world should most nearly secure permanency would be for the Canadian Government to take over the fund and appoint as his custodian say the Prime Minister of the Dominion or the Prime Minister in association with the Minister of Finance. The medals would be struck at the Mint in Ottawa and the duty of the custodian would be simply to hand over the medals at the proper time to the accredited International Committee.
The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Charles Fefferman According to our current online database, charles fefferman has 11 students and17 descendants. We welcome any additional information. http://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/id.phtml?id=6678
The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Update Data For Charles Fefferman If you have Mathematics Subject Classifications to submit for an entire group ofindividuals (for instance all those that worked under a particular advisor) http://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/php/submit-update.php?id=6678
Selected Papers Of Charles Fefferman Selected Papers of charles fefferman. Extension of Cm,wSmooth Functions by LinearOperators Interpolation and Extrapolation of Smooth Functions by Linear http://www.math.princeton.edu/facultypapers/Fefferman/
åå¨åå¦å°: Charles Fefferman: U.S.A.'s Youngest Full Profes http//scidiv.bcc.ctc.edu/Math/fefferman.html. charles fefferman. born April18, 1949 in Silver Springs, Maryland. Child prodigy. http://spaces.msn.com/members/hooklee/Blog/cns!1pJGirfPGsbQdkNhrTSH00Gg!196.entr
Extractions: Spaces Get your own space ... Music Blog July 22 Charles Fefferman: U.S.A.'s youngest full professor born: April 18, 1949 in Silver Springs, Maryland Child prodigy. U.S.A.'s youngest full professor. Works in the fields of Fourier analysis, functions of several complex variables, and partial differential equations. Fields Medalist . Noted for solving "really hard" problems. Mathematics, music and chess seem to be the only fields in which true prodigies occur. Before he was 12 years old, Fefferman had guided tours at the Smithsonian, acted as a trouble-shooter for an auto mechanic, and mastered calculus. By 17 he had graduated with high honors from the University of Maryland, and at 20 he earned his Ph.D. from Princeton. At 22 the newly bearded "Charlie" became a full professor at the University of Chicago. By the time he was 24, he completed the work that earned him a Fields Medal (awarded every 4 years to a mathematician under 40) and a host of other honors. Fefferman's meteoric climb to prominence is not typical of even first-rate minds in any field.
Alibris: Stephen Wainger by fefferman, Robert A (Editor), and Wainger, Stephen (Editor), and fefferman,charles (Editor) This book contains the lectures presented at a conference http://www.alibris.com/search/books/author/Wainger, Stephen
Extractions: This book contains the lectures presented at a conference held at Princeton University in honor of Elias M. Stein's sixtieth birthday. The lectures deal with Fourier analysis and its applications. The contributors to the volume are W. Beckner, A. Boggess, J. Bourgain, A. Carbery, M. Christ, R. R. Coifman, S. Dobyinsky, C. Fefferman, R. Fefferman, Y...
Paths To Erdos 3 Enrico Bombieri 1974 Italy 2 David Mumford 1974 Great Britain 2 PierreDeligne 1978 Belgium 3 charles fefferman 1978 USA 2 Gregory Margulis 1978 USSR http://www.oakland.edu/enp/erdpaths.html
Extractions: The tables below shows of some famous scientists and mathematicians, including many Nobel laureates . Further details, including the paths that establish these numbers and many other people, can be found in LATeX postscript (419K, 35 pages), and pdf (453K, 35 pages). It appears (somewhat abbreviated) in The Mathematical Intelligencer Revista de la Academia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Fisicas y Naturales In addition, we have listed on a separate page the collaboration paths Fields Medal , the Nevanlinna Prize , the Abel Prize , the Wolf Prize in Mathematics , and the Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement , as well as a few others. Perhaps the most famous contemporary mathematician, Andrew Wiles , was too old to receive a Fields Medal (but was given a Special Tribute by the Committee at the 1998 ICM ANDREW ODLYZKO to Chris M. Skinner. William H. (Bill) Gates , who published with Christos H. Papadimitriou in 1979, who published with Xiao Tie Deng PAVOL HELL Eugene V. Koonin, at the National Center for Biotechnology Information Felipe Voloch We would like to acknowledge and thank the dozens of people, too numerous to mention by name, who have written in with suggestions, additions, and corrections to these lists. We would appreciate further help from anybody with relevant information. Arthur L. Schawlow 1981 Physics 5 S. Chandrasekhar 1983 Physics 4 Norman F. Ramsey 1989 Physics 3 David M. Lee 1996 Physics 6 Douglas D. Osheroff 1996 Physics 5 Robert C. Richardson 1996 Physics 6 Gerardus 't Hooft 1999 Physics 6 Martinus J.G. Veltman 1999 Physics 7 Anthony J. Leggett 2003 Physics 4 Frank Wilczek 2004 Physics 3
Math Lessons - Charles Fefferman Math Lessons charles fefferman. charles fefferman. charles Louis fefferman (bornApril 18, 1949) is a renowned mathematician at Princeton. http://www.mathdaily.com/lessons/Charles_Fefferman
Extractions: Search algebra arithmetic calculus equations ... more applied mathematics mathematical games mathematicians more ... Mathematicians Charles Louis Fefferman (born April 18 ) is a renowned mathematician at Princeton . He won the Fields medal in for work in mathematical analysis . Another notable honour attached to his name is that of being the youngest full time professor at a universty in the United States. Indeed, after receiving his bachelor's degree at the age of 17 from the University of Maryland and a PhD at 20 from Princeton University , Fefferman received a full time position at the University of Chicago at the age of 22. At 24, he returned to Princeton to assume a full time professorship there - a position he still holds. His early work included a study of the asymptotics of the Bergmann kernel off the boundaries of pseudoconvex domains in Categories 1949 births Mathematicians Last updated: 09-01-2005 07:35:53 algebra arithmetic calculus equations ... mathematicians
ROSS PROGRAM ALUMNI AND FRIENDS Florence) brucepp-fast-ss-colorado-pp-edu (Fast,Bruce) cf-ss-math-pp-Princeton-pp-edu (fefferman, charles)raf-ss-math-pp-uchicago-pp-edu (fefferman, http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/ross/addresses.html