András Vasy
András Vasy | |
---|---|
Born | 1969 (age 51–52) |
Nationality | American, Hungarian |
Alma mater | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Awards | Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship (2002-2004) Clay Research Fellowship (2004-2006) Bôcher Prize (2017) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | Massachusetts Institute of Technology Stanford University |
Thesis | Propagation of singularities in three-body scattering (1997) |
Doctoral advisor | Richard B. Melrose |
András Vasy (born 1969 in Hungary) is an American, Hungarian mathematician working in the areas of partial differential equations, microlocal analysis, scattering theory, and inverse problems. He is currently a professor of mathematics at Stanford University.[1]
Education and career[]
Vasy attended Stanford University, obtaining his B.S. in Physics and M.S. in Mathematics in 1993. He received his Ph.D. from MIT under the supervision of Richard B. Melrose in 1997.[2] Following his postdoctoral appointment at the University of California, Berkeley, he joined the MIT faculty as an assistant professor in 1999. He was awarded tenure at MIT in 2005[3] during a long-term stay at Northwestern University before moving to Stanford in 2006.
Awards and honors[]
Vasy was an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow from 2002 to 2004,[4] and a Clay Research Fellow from 2004 to 2006.[5] He was elected a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society in 2012. He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Seoul in 2014.[6] In 2017, he was awarded the Bôcher Prize of the American Mathematical Society.[7]
Research[]
The unifying feature of Vasy's work is the application of tools from microlocal analysis to problems in hyperbolic partial differential or pseudo-differential equations. He analyzed the propagation of singularities for solutions of wave equations on manifolds with corners[8] or more complicated boundary structures, partially in joint work with Richard Melrose and .[9] For his paper on a unified approach to scattering theory on asymptotically hyperbolic spaces and spacetimes arising in Einstein's theory of general relativity such as de Sitter space and Kerr-de Sitter spacetimes,[10] he was awarded the Bôcher Prize in 2017. This paper led to further advances, including the proof, by Vasy and , of the global nonlinear stability of the Kerr-de Sitter family of black hole spacetimes,[11] and a new proof of Smale's conjecture for Anosov flows by and Maciej Zworski.[12] Vasy has also collaborated with Gunther Uhlmann on inverse problems for geodesic transforms.[13]
References[]
- ^ Website at Stanford University
- ^ András Vasy in the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ "25 faculty members earn tenure"
- ^ List of past Sloan Fellows
- ^ András Vasy, Clay Mathematics Institute
- ^ Scientific program
- ^ "Andras Vasy to Receive 2017 AMS Bôcher Prize"
- ^ András Vasy, "Propagation of singularities for the wave equation on manifolds with corners", Annals of Mathematics 168, 749-812 (2008)
- ^ Jared Wunsch, András Vasy, and Richard B. Melrose, "Propagation of singularities for the wave equation on edge manifolds", Duke Math. J. 144(1), pp. 109-193 (2008)
- ^ András Vasy, "Microlocal analysis of asymptotically hyperbolic and Kerr-de Sitter spaces (with an appendix by Semyon Dyatlov)", Inventiones Mathematicae 194(2), pp. 381–513 (2013)
- ^ Peter Hintz and András Vasy, "The global non-linear stability of the Kerr–de Sitter family of black holes", Acta Mathematica 220(1), pp. 1-206 (2018)
- ^ Semyon Dyatlov and Maciej Zworski, "Dynamical zeta functions for Anosov flows via microlocal analysis", Annales scientifiques de l'ENS 49(3), pp. 543-577 (2016)
- ^ Gunther Uhlmann and András Vasy, "The inverse problem for the local geodesic ray transform", Inventiones Mathematicae 205(1), pp. 83-120 (2016)
- 1969 births
- 21st-century American mathematicians
- 21st-century Hungarian mathematicians
- Living people
- American relativity theorists
- Stanford University alumni
- Stanford University Department of Mathematics faculty
- PDE theorists
- Fellows of the American Mathematical Society