Tomek Bartoszyński | |
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Born | May 16, 1957 Warsaw |
Residence | Arlington, Virginia |
Nationality | United States, Poland |
Fields | Mathematician |
Institutions | National Science Foundation |
Doctoral advisor | Wojciech Guzicki |
Known for | set theory, set theory of the real line, forcing. |
Tomek Bartoszyński (born May 16, 1957 in Warsaw) is a Polish-American mathematician who works in set theory.
He is the son of statistician Robert Bartoszynski.
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Bartoszyński studied mathematics at the University of Warsaw from 1976 to 1981, and worked there from 1981 to 1987. In 1984 he defended his Ph.D. thesis Combinatorial aspects of measure and category; his advisor was Wojciech Guzicki.[1] In 2004 he received his habilitation from the Polish Academy of Sciences.
From 1986 on he worked in the United States: he taught at University of California in Berkeley and Davis. From 1990 to 2006 he was professor (full professor from 1998 on) at Boise State University. In 1990/91 he visited the Hebrew University of Jerusalem as a fellow of the Lady Davis foundation, and in 1996/97 he visited the Free University of Berlin as a Humboldt fellow.
Currently (2008) he is one of the program directors at the National Science Foundation (NSF), responsible for "Algebra, Number Theory, Combinatorics and Foundations".
His wife Joanna Kania-Bartoszyńska is the NSF program director for topology and geometric analysis.
Bartoszyński's work is mainly concerned with forcing, specifically with applications of forcing to the set theory of the real line. He has written about 50 papers in this field, as well as a monograph: