Hakan Hedenmalm
Håkan Hedenmalm (born August 25, 1961 in Karlstad) is a Swedish mathematician.
Career
Hedenmalm has mainly contributed to the development of the theory of Bergman spaces and the associated reproducing kernels in one complex variable. In 1996 he became a professor at Lund University and in 1997 he was elected to the Royal Physiographic Society in Lund.[1][2]
Hedenmalm has collaborated with a number of other mathematicians, in particular with Alexander Borichev, Serguei Shimorin and Nikolai Makarov. Since 2002 he is professor at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm.
Distinctions
He received the Wallenberg Prize in 1992, and in 1996 he was invited speaker at 2ECM (other European Mathematicians Congress) in Budapest.
In 2000 he received the Göran Gustafsson Prize (KVA). In 2015, he received the Eva and Lars Gårding Prize from the Royal Physiographic Society in Lund.
Bibliography
- On the primary ideal structure at infinity for analytic Beurling algebras. Arkiv för Matematik, vol 23, pp. 129–158
- A comparison between the closed modular ideals in L1(w) and l1(w). Mathematica Scandinavica vol 58, pp. 275–300.
- Bounded analytic functions and closed ideals. Journal d'Analyse Mathématique vol 48, pp. 142–166
- Superalgebras and closed ideals. Commentationes Mathematicae (Prace Matematyczne) vol 28, pp. 73–79
- Comparisons of ideal structures in algebras of analytic functions of several complex variables. Mathematica Scandinavica vol 63, pp. 305–314
- Outer functions in function algebras on the bidisc. Transactions of the American Mathematical Society vol 306, pp. 697–714
- Outer functions of several complex variables. Journal of Functional Analysis vol 80, pp. 9–15.
- Translates of functions of two variables. Duke Mathematical Journal vol 58, pp. 251–297. Erratum (1996).
- Closed ideals in the ball algebra. Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society vol 21, 469–474.
References
- ↑ "Håkan Hedenmalm – The Mathematics Genealogy Project". genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu. Retrieved 2017-02-05.
- ↑ "Håkan Hedenmalm – The Mathematics Genealogy Project". genealogy.ams.org. Retrieved 2017-02-05.