Grigory Margulis - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia (Redirected from Gregory margulis). gregori Aleksandrovich margulis (first nameoften given as Gregory, Grigori or Grigory) (born February 24, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregory_Margulis
Extractions: Over US$220,000 has been donated since the drive began on 19 August. Thank you for your generosity! (Redirected from Gregory Margulis Gregori Aleksandrovich Margulis (first name often given as Gregory Grigori or Grigory ) (born February 24 ) is a mathematician known for his far-reaching work on lattices in Lie groups , and the introduction of methods from ergodic theory into diophantine approximation . He was awarded a Fields Medal in and a Wolf Prize in (joining six mathematicians, up to 2004, who had received both prizes). He was born into a Jewish family in Moscow USSR . He studied at Moscow State University , starting research in ergodic theory. Early work with David Kazhdan produced the Kazhdan-Margulis theorem , a basic result on discrete groups . His superrigidity theorem from clarified a whole area of classical conjectures about the characterisation of arithmetic groups amongst lattices in Lie groups. He was awarded the Fields Medal in 1978, but was not permitted to travel to
GameDev.net - SciMath FAQ Charles Washington DC USA 29 Princeton U USA 1978 margulis, gregori MoscowUSSR 32 InstPrblmInfTrans USSR 1978 Quillen, Daniel Orange NJ USA 38 MIT USA http://www.gamedev.net/reference/articles/article431.asp
Awards Sussex UK 37 1978 Deligne, Pierre Brussels Belgium 33 1978 Fefferman, CharlesWashington DC USA 29 1978 margulis, gregori Moscow USSR 32 1978 Quillen, http://www.arthurhu.com/index/aaward.htm
Extractions: award see aaward.htm link Miss USA web page Field Forbes Hi Tech 100 Forbes 1998 Hi Tech 100 List of jews on list 1 Grove 2 Horowitz 3 Levy 4 Levine 5 Larry Ellison 6 Michael Dell range of 6-13% 7 Wilner Sailer on Forbes 100 Fortune Richest 40 under 40 Fortune Magazine 2001 list Fox Smartest Kid In America FOX SMARTEST KID IN AMERICA 90% ASIAN Ivy League MattNF compiled these figures: original McArthur Foundation Home Page Fellows Program Millionaire (Who Wants to Be) Apr 2000 "Greg McDivitt" Nobel Prize There are reports that Jews have gotten from 20% up to 40% of the Nobel prizes. It's way more than their population, but it's nowhere near that high. Not many Asians on most lists. Nearly all are Jews, Europeans or Euro-Americans, and the Asians tend to be Asian Americans. Japan has only one about 1 prize per decade. Links Database of the Nobel Laureates %%Asian Cochran Japan has as many nobel prizes - 6 as Australia?! Jewish Science Winners Yahoo Nobel links http://www.yahoo.com/Society_and_Culture/Organizations/Foundations/Nobel_Foundation/ Internet Archive Physics Chemistry Peace Prize ... Physiology and Medicine Send reply to: Philippe Gouillou To: "Peter Frost" Copies to: Subject: [h-bd] Playboy : fifties Bonjour, Stats done very quickly from Thumbnails (in "PLAYBOY 40 ANS : Toute l'histoire de Playboy en 1000 images" - 1994) Playmate of the month : Blond Dark RedHair 1953 1 1954 5 5 2 1955 5 3 4 1956 5 4 3 1957 4 6 2 1958 5 5 2 1959 5 6 1 1960 4 7 1 1961 1 9 2 Playmate of the year : 1960 : red/brown 1961 : blond 1962 : Brown The first black playmate was in 1990 A quick overview of all the thumbnails doesn't show a domination of blondes until the 90's From: "Peter Frost"
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February 24 - Today In Science History FEBRUARY 24 BIRTHS. gregori Aleksandrovich margulis In particular, margulisproved a long-standing conjecture by Atle Selberg concerning discrete http://www.todayinsci.com/2/2_24.htm
Extractions: Russian mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1978 for his contributions to the theory of Lie groups, though he was not allowed by the Soviet government to travel to Finland to receive the award. In 1990 Margulis immigrated to the United States. Margulis' work was largely involved in solving a number of problems in the theory of Lie groups. In particular, Margulis proved a long-standing conjecture by Atle Selberg concerning discrete subgroups of semisimple Lie groups. The techniques he used in his work were drawn from combinatorics, ergodic theory, dynamical systems, and differential geometry. Henri Frankfort Dutch-American archaeologist who established the relationship between Egypt and Mesopotamia and completed a thoroughly documented reconstruction of ancient Mesopotamian culture and art. The excavations he directed in Egypt (1922, 1925-29) and Iraq (1929-37) were conducted with exemplary archaeological scholarship. In 1925, Frankfort resumed work which had been started by Naville at
FIELDS MEDALLISTS' LECTURES Autobiography; Pattern Theory A Unifying Perspective; (1978) GA margulis;The Work of gregori Aleksandrovitch margulis by J Tits; Biographical Notice http://www.worldscibooks.com/mathematics/3445.html
Extractions: Although the Fields Medal does not have the same public recognition as the Nobel Prizes, they share a similar intellectual standing. It is restricted to one field that of mathematics and an age limit of 40 has become an accepted tradition. Mathematics has in the main been interpreted as pure mathematics, and this is not so unreasonable since major contributions in some applied areas can be (and have been) recognized with Nobel Prizes. The restriction to 40 years is of marginal significance, since most mathematicians have made their mark long before this age. A list of Fields Medallists and their contributions provides a bird's eye view of mathematics over the past 60 years. It highlights the areas in which, at various times, greatest progress has been made. This volume does not pretend to be comprehensive, nor is it a historical document. On the other hand, it presents contributions from 22 Fields Medallists and so provides a highly interesting and varied picture. The contributions themselves represent the choice of the individual Medallists. In some cases the articles relate directly to the work for which the Fields Medals were awarded. In other cases new articles have been produced which relate to more current interests of the Medallists. This indicates that while Fields Medallists must be under 40 at the time of the award, their mathematical development goes well past this age. In fact the age limit of 40 was chosen so that young mathematicians would be encouraged in their future work.
Fields Medal Winners Fefferman (Princeton University), gregori Alexandrovitch margulis (MoscowUniversity), and Daniel G. Quillen (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0192505.html
Extractions: Arts and Entertainment Awards Science and Other Awards The Fields Medal has been awarded quadrennially since 1936 by the International Congress of Mathematicians in Toronto to recognize outstanding mathematics achievement. Lars Valerian Ahlfors (Harvard University) and Jesse Douglas (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) (Fields Medals were not awarded during World War II) Laurent Schwarts (University of Nancy) and Atle Selberg (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton) Kunihiko Kodaira (Princeton University) and Jean-Pierre Serre (University of Paris) Michael Francis Atiyah (Oxford University), Paul Joseph Cohen (Stanford University), Alexander Grothendieck (University of Paris), and Stephen Smale (University of California, Berkeley)
Grigory Margulis Biography .ms gregori Aleksandrovich margulis (first name often given as Gregory, Grigori orGrigory) (born February 24 1946) is a mathematician known for his http://grigory-margulis.biography.ms/
Extractions: Gregori Aleksandrovich Margulis (first name often given as Gregory Grigori or Grigory ) (born February 24 ) is a mathematician known for his far-reaching work on lattices in Lie groups , and the introduction of methods from ergodic theory into diophantine approximation . He was awarded a Fields Medal in 1978. He was born into a Jewish family in Moscow USSR . He studied at Moscow State University , starting research in ergodic theory. Early work with David Kazhdan produced the Kazhdan-Margulis theorem , a basic result on discrete groups . His superridigity theorem from 1975 clarified a whole area of classical conjectures about the characterisation of arithmetic groups amongst lattices in Lie groups. He was awarded the Fields Medal in 1978, but was not permitted to travel to Helsinki to accept in person. His position improved, and 1979 he visited Bonn , and was later able to travel freely, though he still worked in a technical institute rather than a mathematics department. In 1991 he took a professorial position at Yale University In 1986 he completed the proof of the Oppenheim conjecture on quadratic forms and diophantine approximation. This was a question that had been open for half a century, on which considerable progress had been made by the Hardy-Littlewood circle method ; but to reduce the number of variables to the point of getting the best-possible results, the more structural methods from group theory proved decisive. He has formulated a further program of research in the same direction, that includes the
Fields Medal -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biography gregori Alexandrovitch margulis (Moscow University). Daniel G. Quillen (MassachusettsInstitute of Technology). 1982, Alain Connes (Institut des Hautes http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/FieldsMedal.html
Extractions: This entry contributed by Michel Barran The mathematical equivalent of the Nobel Prize (there is no Nobel Prize in mathematics) which is awarded by the International Mathematical Union every four years to one or more outstanding researchers. "Fields Medals" are more properly known by their official name, "International medals for outstanding discoveries in mathematics." The Field Medals were first proposed at the 1924 International Congress of Mathematicians in Toronto, where a resolution was adopted stating that at each subsequent conference, two gold medals should be awarded to recognize outstanding mathematical achievement. Professor J. C. Fields, a Canadian mathematician who was secretary of the 1924 Congress, later donated funds establishing the medals which were named in his honor. Consistent with Fields' wish that the awards recognize both existing work and the promise of future achievement, it was agreed to restrict the medals to mathematicians not over forty at the year of the Congress. In 1966 it was agreed that, in light of the great expansion of mathematical research, up to four medals could be awarded at each Congress. The Fields Medal is the highest scientific award for mathematicians, and is presented every four years at the International Congress of Mathematicians, together with a prize of 15,000 Canadian dollars. The first Fields Medal was awarded in 1936 at the World Congress in Oslo. The Fields Medal is made of gold, and shows the head of
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Jewish Wolf Prize Winners In Mathematics Yakov Sinai (1996/97); Elias Stein (1999); Raoul Bott 1 (2000); Vladimir Arnold2 (2001); Saharon Shelah (2001); gregori margulis (2005) http://www.jinfo.org/Wolf_Mathematics.html
Extractions: (40% of all recipients) Izrail Gelfand (1978) Oscar Zariski (1981) Mark Krein (1982) Hans Lewy (1984/85) Samuel Eilenberg (1986) Peter Lax (1987) Ilya Piatetski-Shapiro (1990) Mikhael Gromov (1993) Joseph Keller (1996/97) Yakov Sinai (1996/97) Elias Stein (1999) Raoul Bott Vladimir Arnold Saharon Shelah (2001) Gregori Margulis (2005)
Jewish Fields Medalists Klaus Roth (1958); Paul Cohen (1966); Alexander Grothendieck 2 (1966);Charles Fefferman (1978); gregori margulis (1978); Michael Freedman 3 (1982) http://www.jinfo.org/Fields_Mathematics.html
Extractions: According to the obituary notice for Jesse Douglas published in the October 8, 1965 edition of The New York Herald Tribune , he died at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan and his funeral was held the following day at the "The Riverside" (the largest exclusively Jewish funeral chapel in New York City). Douglas, who was the first recipient of a Fields Medal, was born in New York City and educated at the City College of New York and at Columbia University. His entry in the 1964-1965 edition of Marquis Who's Who in America indicates that his mother's maiden name was Sarah Kommel. The name "Kommel" is most frequently found among Jews originating in the Pale of Settlement; see A Dictionary of Jewish Surnames from the Russian Empire , by Alexander Beider (Avotaynu, Inc., Teaneck NJ, 1993, p. 326). The death notice lists a brother, Dr. Harold Douglas, and a sister, Pearl Schweizer, among his survivors. Dr. Harold Douglas maintained medical offices at Beth Israel Medical Center in lower Manhattan.
History Of Mathematics: Fields Medals gregori margulis; Daniel Quillen. 1982. Alain Connes; William Thurston; ShingTungYau. 1986. Simon Donaldson; Gerd Faltings; Michael Freedman http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/mathhist/fieldsmedal.html
Extractions: 1993: Walter Rudin, George Daniel Mostow, and Eugene B. Dynkin. Donald J.Alberts, G. L. Alexanderson and Constance Reid. International Mathematical Congresses, An Illustrated History 1893-1986. Revised Edition, Including 1986, by, Springer Verlag, 1987. Henry S. Tropp. ``The origins and history of the Fields Medal,''
Fields Medallists 1978 Pierre René Deligne (Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques) Charles LouisFefferman (Princeton University) gregori Alexandrovitch margulis (Moscow http://www.math.harvard.edu/history/fields/
Extractions: 1936 Lars Valerian Ahlfors ( Harvard University ) Jesse Douglas (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) 1950 Laurent Schwartz (University of Nancy) Atle Selberg (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton) 1954 Kunihiko Kodaira (Princeton University) Jean-Pierre Serre (University of Paris) 1966 Michael Francis Atiyah (Oxford University) Paul Joseph Cohen (Stanford University) Alexander Grothendieck (University of Paris) Stephen Smale (University of California, Berkeley) 1970 Alan Baker (Cambridge University) Heisuke Hironaka ( Harvard University ) Serge P. Novikov (Moscow University) John Griggs Thompson (Cambridge University) 1974 Enrico Bombieri (University of Pisa) David Bryant Mumford ( Harvard University Shing-Tung Yau (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton) 1986 Simon Donaldson (Oxford University) Gerd Faltings (Princeton University) Michael Freedman (University of California, San Diego) 1990 Vladimir Drinfeld (Phys. Inst. Kharkov) Vaughan Jones (University of California, Berkeley) Shigefumi Mori (University of Kyoto?) Edward Witten (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton) 1998 Richard E. Borcherds (Cambridge University) W. Timothy Gowers (Cambridge University) Maxim Kontsevich (IHES Bures-sur-Yvette) Curtis T. McMullen (
Gregori Margulis Université Montpellier II gregori margulis (1946-0BC). Cette image et la biographie complète en anglais http://ens.math.univ-montp2.fr/SPIP/article.php3?id_article=2204
Fields Medal 1978 gregori Aleksandrovic margulis (1946) Russia. 1978 Daniel G Quillen (1940)USA. 1982 Alain Connes (1947) France. 1982 William P Thurston (1946) USA http://alas.matf.bg.ac.yu/~mm97106/math/fieldsm.htm
Extractions: The Fields Medal John Charles Fields Will established the Fields Medal, which has played the role of the Nobel Prize in Mathematics. The International Congress of Mathematicians at Zurich in 1932 adopted his proposal, and the Fields Medal was first awarded at the next congress, held at Oslo in 1936. Fields Medals were not awarded during World War II so the second Fields Medals were not awarded until 1950. Fields wished that the awards should recognize both existing mathematical work and also the promise of future achievement. To fit with these wishes Fields Medals may only be awarded to mathematicans under the age of 40. The winners of the medals are given below. 1936 Lars Valerian Ahlfors (1907-1996) Finland 1936 Jesse Douglas (1897-1965) USA 1950 Laurent Schwartz (1915) France 1950 Atle Selberg (1917) Norway 1954 Kunihiko Kodaira (1915-1997) Japan 1954 Jean-Pierre Serre (1926) France 1958 Klaus Friedrich Roth (1925) England 1958 Reni Thom (1923) France 1962 Lars Hvrmander (1931) Sweden 1962 John Willard Milnor (1931) USA 1966 Michael Francis Atiyah (1929) England 1966 Paul Joseph Cohen (1934) USA 1966 Alexander Grothendieck (1928) Germany 1966 Stephen Smale (1930) USA 1970 Alen Baker (1939) England 1970 Heisuke Hironaka (1931) Japan 1970 Sergi Petrovich Novikov (1938) Russia 1970 John Griggs Thompson (1932) USA 1974 Enrico Bombieri (1946) Italy 1974 David Bryant Mumford (1937) England 1978 Pierre Reni Deligne (1944) Belgium 1978 Charles Louis Fefferman (1949) USA
Famous Mathematicians With An M Vladimir Marchenko Jozef Marcinkiewicz Edward Marczewski gregori margulis AndreiMarkov Lorenzo Mascheroni Heinrich Maschke Francis Maseres Nevil Maskelyne http://www.famousmathematician.com/az/mathematician_M.htm
New Books For 04/02/2004 AUTHOR, margulis, GA (gregori Aleksandrovitsch), 1946. TITLE, On some aspectsof the theory of Anosov systems / Grigoriy A. margulis ; translated from http://www.nyu.edu/pages/cimslibrary/newbook/040204.html
Extractions: AUTHOR: Liu, Jiming, 1962- TITLE: Spatial reasoning and planning : geometry, mechanism, and motion / Jiming Liu, Laeeque K. Daneshmend. PUBLISHER: Berlin ; New York : Springer-Verlag, c2004. SERIES: Advanced information processing CALL NUMBER: Q 335 .L575 2004 CIMM UNIFORM TITLE: Matematica e cultura 2000. English. TITLE: Mathematics and culture I / Michele Emmer, editor ; translated by Emanuela Moreale. PUBLISHER: Berlin ; New York : Springer, c2004. CALL NUMBER: QA 1 .M27713 2004 CIMM AUTHOR: Courtieu, Michel, 1973- TITLE: Non-Archimedean L-functions and arithmetical Siegel modular forms / Michel Courtieu, Alexei Panchishkin. EDITION: 2nd augmented ed. PUBLISHER: Berlin ; New York : Springer, c2004. SERIES: Lecture notes in mathematics, 1471 CALL NUMBER: QA 3 .L28 no. 1471 CIMM AUTHOR: Georgiadou, Maria. TITLE: PUBLISHER: Berlin ; New York : Springer, c2004. CALL NUMBER: QA 29 .C35 G46 2004 CIMM AUTHOR: Euclid. UNIFORM TITLE: Elements. English TITLE: Euclid's Elements : all thirteen books complete in one volume : the Thomas L. Heath translation / Dana Densmore, editor. PUBLISHER: Santa Fe, N.M. : Green Lion Press, 2002.