Nicholas Shepherd-Barron
Nicholas Ian Shepherd-Barron | |
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Born | March 17, 1955 |
Residence | Cambridge, England |
Institutions | University of Cambridge, King's College London |
Thesis | Some Questions on Singularities in Two and Three Dimensions (1981) |
Doctoral advisor | Miles Reid |
Doctoral students |
Thomas Fisher Gábor Megyesi Helena Verrill Jan Wierzba |
Nicholas Ian Shepherd-Barron, born 17 March 1955, is a British mathematician working in algebraic geometry. He is, since 2013, professor of mathematics at King's College London,[1] having moved there from his previous position at Cambridge University. Having been a Fellow for more than 20 years, Shepherd-Barron retains a life Fellowship of Trinity College, Cambridge.
He was a scholar of Winchester College. He obtained his Ph.D. at the University of Warwick in 1981 under the supervision of Miles Reid. He worked initially in the area of birational geometry and Mori theory. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 2006. His work has had a major impact on modern work on classification of higher-dimensional varieties.
He is the son of John Shepherd-Barron, a Scottish inventor.