Boris Tsirelson | |
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Boris Tsirelson while a first-year student, in 1967
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Born | May 4, 1950 Leningrad |
Doctoral advisor | Ildar Ibragimov |
Known for | Tsirelson's bound Tsirelson space Tsirelson drift Gaussian isoperimetric inequality |
Boris Semyonovich Tsirelson (Hebrew: בוריס סמיונוביץ' צירלסון, Russian: Борис Семенович Цирельсон) is a Soviet-Israeli mathematician and Professor of Mathematics in the Tel Aviv University in Israel.
Boris Tsirelson was born in Leningrad to a Russian Jewish family. From his father Simeon's side, he is the great-nephew of rabbi Yehuda Leib Tsirelson, chief rabbi of Bessarabia from 1918 to 1941, and a prominent posek and Jewish leader.
Tsirelson obtained his M.S. from the university of Leningrad; he stayed in Leningrad to pursue his graduate studies, finishing his PhD in 1975.
Later, he participated in the refusenik movement, but only received permission to emigrate to Israel in 1991. Since then, he is a professor in Tel-Aviv University.
Tsirelson has made notable contributions to probability theory and functional analysis. They include: