Melvin Hochster

Melvin Hochster
Born August 2, 1943
Brooklyn
Nationality United States
Fields Mathematics
Institutions University of Michigan
Alma mater Princeton University
Harvard University
Doctoral advisor Goro Shimura
Doctoral students Piotr Blass
Sankar Dutta
Karen E. Smith
Notable awards Cole Prize (1980)
Guggenheim Fellowship (1981)
Putnam Fellow (1960)

Melvin Hochster (born August 2, 1943) is an eminent American mathematician, regarded as one of the leading commutative algebraists active today. He is currently the Jack E. McLaughlin Distinguished University Professor of Mathematics at the University of Michigan.

Hochster attended Stuyvesant High School,[1] where he was captain of the Math Team, and received a B.A. from Harvard University. While at Harvard, he was a Putnam Fellow in 1960. He earned his Ph.D. in 1967 from Princeton University, where he wrote a dissertation under Goro Shimura characterizing the prime spectra of commutative rings. He held positions at the University of Minnesota and Purdue University before joining the faculty at Michigan in 1977. Hochster shared the 1980 Cole Prize with Michael Aschbacher, received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1981, and has been a member of both the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences since 1992. In 2008, on the occasion of his 65th birthday, he was honored with a conference in Ann Arbor and with a special volume of the Michigan Mathematical Journal.

Hochster's work is primarily in commutative algebra, especially the study of modules over local rings. He has established classic theorems concerning Cohen-Macaulay rings, invariant theory and homological algebra. For example, the Hochster-Roberts theorem states that the invariant ring of a linearly reductive group acting on a regular ring is Cohen-Macaulay. His best-known work is on the homological conjectures, many of which he established for local rings containing a field, thanks to his proof of the existence of big Cohen-Macaulay modules and his technique of reduction to prime characteristic. His most recent work on tight closure, introduced in 1986 with Craig Huneke, has found unexpected applications throughout commutative algebra and algebraic geometry.

Hochster has been recognized for his efforts in mentoring and popularizing mathematics through lectures and articles. He has had more than 30 doctoral students, and the Association for Women in Mathematics has pointed out his outstanding role in mentoring women students pursuing a career in mathematics. He is currently (since 2009) serving as the chair of the department of Mathematics at the University of Michigan.

Hochster's hobbies are cryptic crosswords and contract bridge.

See also

References

External links