Mikhail Leonidovich Gromov

Mikhail Leonidovich Gromov

Mikhail Gromov
Born 23 December 1943 (1943-12-23) (age 68)
Boksitogorsk, Russian SFSR, USSR
Residence France
Nationality Russian
Fields Mathematics
Institutions Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques
New York University
Alma mater Leningrad (PhD)
Doctoral advisor Vladimir Rokhlin
Doctoral students Denis Auroux
Christophe Bavard
François Labourie
Pierre Pansu
Abdelghani Zeghib
Known for Geometry
Notable awards see text

Mikhail Leonidovich Gromov, also spelled Mikhael Gromov or Michael Gromov; Russian: Михаи́л Леони́дович Гро́мов, (born 23 December 1943), is a Russian mathematician known for important contributions in many different areas of mathematics. He is considered a geometer in a very broad sense of the word.

Contents

Work

Gromov's style of geometry features a "coarse" or "soft" viewpoint, often analyzing asymptotic or large-scale properties.

His impact has been felt most heavily in geometric group theory, where he characterized groups of polynomial growth and created the notion of hyperbolic group; symplectic topology, where he introduced pseudoholomorphic curves, and in Riemannian geometry. His work, however, has delved deeply into analysis and algebra, where he will often formulate a problem in "geometric" terms. For example, his homotopy principle (h-principle) on differential relations is the basis for a geometric theory of partial differential equations.

Gromov is also interested in mathematical biology.[1]

Gromov studied for a doctorate (1973) in Leningrad, where he was a student of Vladimir Rokhlin. He is now a permanent member of IHÉS, and a Professor of Mathematics at New York University.

Prizes and honors

Prizes

Honors

See also

Books and other publications

Notes

References

External links