Dennis Gaitsgory
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Dennis Gaitsgory | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | Tel Aviv University |
Awards | EMS Prize (2000) Chevalley Prize (2018) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | Max Planck Institute for Mathematics Harvard University University of Chicago |
Doctoral advisor | Joseph Bernstein |
Dennis Gaitsgory is an Israeli-American mathematician. He is a mathematician at Max Planck Institute for Mathematics (MPIM) at Bonn and is known for his research on the geometric Langlands program.
Life and career
[edit]Born in Chișinău (now in Moldova) he grew up in Tajikistan, before studying at Tel Aviv University under Joseph Bernstein (1990–1996). He received his doctorate in 1997 for a thesis entitled "Automorphic Sheaves and Eisenstein Series". He has been awarded a Harvard Junior Fellowship, a Clay Research Fellowship, and the prize of the European Mathematical Society for his work.
His work in geometric Langlands culminated in a joint 2002 paper with Edward Frenkel and Kari Vilonen,[1] establishing the conjecture for finite fields, and a separate 2004 paper,[2] generalizing the proof to include the field of complex numbers as well.
Prior to his current appointment at MPIM Bonn, he was a professor of mathematics at Harvard and an associate professor at the University of Chicago from 2001–2005.
Selected publications
[edit]- Gaitsgory, Dennis; Rozenblyum, Nick (2017). A Study in Derived Algebraic Geometry. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-1-4704-3569-1.
- Gaitsgory, Dennis; Lurie, Jacob (19 February 2019). Weil's Conjecture for Function Fields: Volume I (AMS-199). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-18443-2.