Heisuke Hironaka

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Heisuke Hironaka
Born (1931-04-09) 9 April 1931
Yuu-chō, Kuga-Gun, Yamaguchi, Japan
(modern-day Iwakuni, Yamaguchi, Japan)
Nationality Japanese
Fields Mathematics
Institutions Harvard University
Columbia University
Seoul National University
Alma mater Harvard University
Doctoral advisor Oscar Zariski
Doctoral students William Haboush
Allen Tannenbaum
Bernard Teissier
Notable awards Fields Medal (1970)

Heisuke Hironaka (広中 平祐 Hironaka Heisuke, born 9 April 1931) is a Japanese mathematician. He failed the entrance examination for Hiroshima University in Japan, but after one year he passed the entrance examination for Kyoto University in Japan. After completing his undergraduate studies at Kyoto University, he received his Ph.D. from Harvard while under the direction of Oscar Zariski. He won the Fields Medal in 1970.

He is celebrated for proving in 1964 that singularities of algebraic varieties admit resolutions in characteristic zero. This means that any algebraic variety can be replaced by (more precisely is birationally equivalent to) a similar variety which has no singularities. He also introduced Hironaka's example showing that a deformation of Kähler manifolds need not be Kähler.

Hironaka was for many years a Professor of mathematics at Harvard University but currently lives in Japan, where he is greatly respected and influential. He is also a professor of mathematics at Seoul National University in South Korea.[1] He has been active in raising funds for causes such as mathematical education. He is president of the University of Creation; Art, Music & Social Work, a private university in Takasaki, Gunma, Japan.

He once wrote a paper under a pseudonym derived from Kobayashi Issa, a famous Japanese haiku poet.[2] The result is known as Issa's theorem in complex function theory.

Hironaka is married to Wakako Hironaka, a politician, and they have two children.

List of books available in English

  • Formal functions and formal imbeddings / by Heisuke Hironaka and Hideyuki Matsumura (1967)
  • On the characters \nu and \tau of singularities / by Heisuke Hironaka
  • Introduction to the theory of infinitely near singular points / Heisuke Hironaka (1974)
  • The theory of the maximal contact / José M. Aroca, Heisuke Hironaka and José L. Vicente (1975)
  • Desingularization theorems / Jose M. Aroca, Heisuke Hironaka and Jose L. Vicente (1977)
  • Geometric singularity theory / editors of the volume, Heisuke Hironaka, Stanisław Janeczko (2004)

References

  1. Choi, Naeun (2008-11-10). "Fields Medal recipient appointed as SNU Professor". Useoul.edu. Retrieved 2009-05-14. 
  2. Tráng, Lê Dũng; Teissier, Bernard (2008). "On the mathematical work of Professor Heisuke Hironaka". Publications of the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Kyoto University 44 (2): 165–177. doi:10.2977/prims/1210167324. MR 2426345. .

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.