Michael Atiyah

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Sir Michael Atiyah.
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Sir Michael Atiyah.

Sir Michael Francis Atiyah, OM, FRS (born 22 April 1929) is a British mathematician, widely considered one of the greatest geometers of the 20th century. His path-breaking work with Isadore Singer led to the proof of the Atiyah-Singer index theorem in the 1960s, a result that has helped to pave the way for the development of several branches of mathematics since that time.

He had also founded, earlier and together with Friedrich Hirzebruch, the study of another major tool in algebraic topology: topological K-theory. It was inspired by Alexander Grothendieck's work on generalising the Riemann-Roch theorem, and has since generated algebraic K-theory and many applications to mathematical physics.

In 1966, when he was thirty-seven years old, he was awarded the Fields Medal, for his work in developing K-theory, a generalized Lefschetz fixed-point theorem (jointly with Raoul Bott) and the Atiyah-Singer theorem, for which he also won, in 2004, the Abel Prize jointly with Isadore Singer.

Among the other prizes he has received are the Feltrinelli Prize from the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei (1981) and the King Faisal International Prize for Science (1987).

Atiyah was knighted in 1983 and made a member of the Order of Merit in 1992.

[edit] Biography

Atiyah was born in London to a Scottish mother and the Lebanese writer Edward Atiyah. Patrick Atiyah, professor of law, is his brother.[1] He was brought up mostly in Cairo, Egypt and the Sudan. He later went to Manchester Grammar School and then Trinity College, Cambridge. He was a student of W. V. D. Hodge at Cambridge, where he was awarded a doctorate in 1955 for a thesis entitled Some Applications of Topological Methods in Algebraic Geometry.

He was one of the founders, with Hirzebruch, of topological K-theory, a branch of algebraic topology. He has collaborated with many other mathematicians, for example with Raoul Bott and Isadore Singer on the Atiyah–Bott fixed-point theorem and related developments leading to the Atiyah-Singer index theorem. This led to work in representation theory, and on the heat equation on manifolds. He later turned to an interest in gauge field theories, particularly Yang-Mills theory, paving the way for the work of others such as Witten.

Atiyah's many students include such illustrious mathematicians as Simon Donaldson, Nigel Hitchin, Peter Kronheimer, Graeme Segal, Lisa Jeffrey, Frances Kirwan, who work in gauge theory and symplectic geometry, and Ruth Lawrence, an eighteen year old prodigy at the time of her completion of her PhD.

[edit] Career

Atiyah rejuvenated British mathematics during his years at Oxford and Cambridge. He was also the driving force behind the creation of the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Cambridge and became its first director. He received the Royal Medal of the Royal Society in 1968 and its Copley Medal in 1988. He served as president of the London Mathematical Society (1974 - 1976). In the 1990s, he has been president of the Royal Society, and master of Trinity College, Cambridge.

Atiyah was also active on the international scene. He has served as president of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs. He was responsible for the founding of the InterAcademy Panel on International Issues, a global network of the world's scientific academies which aims to help its member academies to shape public policy in areas related to science. He also instigated the formation of the Association of European Academies (ALLEA), and has played an important role in the shaping of today’s European Mathematical Society (EMS).

Atiyah is now retired and an honorary professor at the University of Edinburgh. He served as Chancellor of the University of Leicester between 1995 and 2005. He has also been professor of mathematics at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. Atiyah has been the president of the Royal Society of Edinburgh since 2005.

In 2004 he was awarded The Abel Prize for mathemathics together with Isadore M. Singer from MIT.

His Erdős number is 3, via a chain of collaborations involving Laurel A. Smith and Persi Diaconis. He is a foreign member of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Professor Atiyah is a Distinguished Supporter of the British Humanist Association.

[edit] External links

Honorary Titles
Preceded by
Sir George Porter
President of the Royal Society
1990–1995
Succeeded by
Sir Aaron Klug
Preceded by
Sir Andrew Huxley
Master of Trinity College, Cambridge
1990–1997
Succeeded by
Amartya Sen
Preceded by
The Lord Porter of Luddenham
Chancellor of the University of Leicester
1995–2005
Succeeded by
Sir Peter Williams


Fields Medalists

1936: AhlforsDouglas | 1950: SchwartzSelberg | 1954: KodairaSerre | 1958: RothThom | 1962: HörmanderMilnor | 1966: AtiyahCohenGrothendieckSmale | 1970: BakerHironakaNovikovThompson | 1974: BombieriMumford | 1978: DeligneFeffermanMargulisQuillen | 1982: ConnesThurstonYau | 1986: DonaldsonFaltingsFreedman | 1990: DrinfeldJonesMoriWitten | 1994: ZelmanovLionsBourgainYoccoz | 1998: BorcherdsGowersKontsevichMcMullen | 2002: LafforgueVoevodsky | 2006: OkounkovPerelmanTaoWerner