José F. Escobar
José Fernando "Chepe" Escobar (born on 20 December 1954, in Manizales, Colombia) was a Colombian mathematician known for his work on differential geometry and partial differential equations. He was professor at Cornell University.[1][2]
Escobar obtained his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1986, under the supervision of Richard Schoen.[3] In his thesis he solved the problem known as "the boundary Yamabe problem", that had been previously settled only for the case of manifolds without boundary.[2]
He died from cancer on 3 January 2004, at the age 49.[2]
Among the awards he received for his work were "the Alfred Sloan Fellowship" and "the Presidential Faculty Fellowship" (received at the White House directly from the hands of the President of the United States).[4]
Mathematician Fernando Codá Marques was a student of him.[3]
Selected publications
Research articles
- "The Yamabe problem on manifolds with boundary", Journal of Differential Geometry, 1992.
- "Conformal deformation of a Riemannian metric to a scalar flat metric with constant mean curvature on the boundary", Annals of Mathematics, 1992.
- "Conformal metrics with prescribed scalar curvature", Inventiones mathematicae, 1986.
- "Sharp constant in a Sobolev trace inequality", Indiana University Mathematics Journal, 1988.
- "Uniqueness theorems on conformal deformation of metrics, Sobolev inequalities, and an eigenvalue estimate", Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics, 1990.
Books
- Topics in PDEs̕ and differential geometry, 2002
- Some variational problems in geometry, 2000
References
- ↑ Marques, F. C. (2005). "On the mathematical work of José F. Escobar", Matemática Contemporânea, Vol. 29, pp. 41–61.
- 1 2 3 Cornell University News, "José Escobar, Cornell mathematics professor, dies at age 49"
- 1 2 Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ Proceedings of the International Conference in Memory of Professor José Fernando Escobar