Enrico Bombieri | |
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Enrico Bombieri
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Born | 26 November 1940 |
Nationality | Italian |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | Institute for Advanced Study |
Alma mater | Trinity College, Cambridge, Liceo poliziano, Montepulciano |
Doctoral advisor | Harold Davenport |
Known for |
Large sieve method in analytic number theory Bombieri–Vinogradov theorem "Heights" in Diophantine geometry Siegel's lemma for bases (Bombieri–Vaaler) Partial differential equations |
Notable awards | 1966, Caccioppoli Prize 1974, Fields Medal 1980, Balzan Prize 2010, King Faisal International Prize |
Enrico Bombieri (born 26 November 1940 in Milan, Italy) is a mathematician who has been working at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. Bombieri's research in number theory, algebraic geometry, and mathematical analysis have earned him many international prizes --- a Fields Medal in 1974 and the Balzan Prize in 1980. In 2010 he received the King Faisal International Prize (jointly with Terence Tao).[1]
The Bombieri–Vinogradov theorem is one of the major applications of the large sieve method. It improves Dirichlet's theorem on prime numbers in arithmetic progressions, by showing that by averaging over the modulus over a range, the mean error is much less than can be proved in a given case. This result can sometimes substitute for the still-unproved generalized Riemann hypothesis.
In 1976, he developed the technique known as the "asymptotic sieve".[2]
Bombieri is also known for his pro bono service on behalf of the mathematics profession, e.g. for serving on external review boards and for peer-reviewing extraordinarily complicated manuscripts (like the papers of John Nash on embedding Riemannian manifolds and of Per Enflo on the invariant subspace problem).
Bombieri, accomplished also in the arts, explored for wild orchids and other plants as a hobby in the Alps when a young man.
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