Igor Rodnianski

Igor Rodnianski (born April 28, 1972, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union) is an American mathematician at the Princeton University.[1] He works in partial differential equations, mathematical physics, and general relativity.

Igor Rodnianski
Alma materKansas State University
AwardsFermat Prize, Clay Mathematics Institute Long-term Prize
Scientific career
FieldsPartial differential equations, mathematical physics, and general relativity
InstitutionsPrinceton University
Thesis'Pseudoholomorphic Curves in Almost Complex Manifolds' (1999)
Doctoral advisor
Lev Vil'evich Kapitanskii

Life

Rodnianski studied at the University of Saint Petersburg, graduating in Physics in 1996. He graduated in 1999 from Kansas State University.

Career

Igor Rodnianski became an instructor at Princeton in 1999. He was promoted to associate professor before 2004. In 2005, Dr. Rodnianski wrote paper on rough solutions to the historical Einstein Vacuum Equation with S. Klainerman.

He became full professor at Princeton in 2005. In 2011, he moved Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In the Spring of 2011, he became the Henry Burchard Fine Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University.[2]

Work

Prof. Rodnianski specializes in hyperbolic partial differential equations related to fundamental problems of mathematics. His work has its basis in geometry, analysis, and mathematical physics. In 2002 he received the Long-Term Prize fellowship of the Clay Mathematics Institute, and in 2010 the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Kansas State University.[2] He received the 2011 Fermat Prize for Mathematical Research, "for fundamental contributions to the study of equations of general relativity and the propagation of light in curved space-times (with M. Dafermos, S. Klainerman, H. Lindblad)."[3] In 2017, he received a Simons Investigator Award.[4]

References

  1. "Princeton Faculty Directory entry". Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  2. "Curriculum Vitae" (PDF). Retrieved 9 April 2016.
  3. "Prix Fermat de Recherche en Mathématiques" (in French). Institut de mathématiques de Toulouse. Retrieved 9 December 2011.
  4. "Simons Investigator Awardees". Simons Foundation. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
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