Fefferman Charles Louis Fefferman. Born 18 April 1949 in Washington, DC, USA. Click thepicture above to see a larger version Charles Fefferman was a child prodigy. http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Charles Fefferman was a child prodigy. It is claimed that he had mastered the calculus before the age of twelve. Fefferman entered the University of Maryland when he was very young and in 1966, at the age of 17, he graduated with the highest distinction. After graduating Fefferman undertook postgraduate work at Princeton University supervised by Elias Stein. He was awarded his PhD in 1969 for a thesis entitled Inequalities for Strongly Regular Convolution Operators. He lectured at Princeton for the years 1969-70. He moved to the University of Chicago in 1970 and, one year later in 1971, he was promoted to full professor there, earning him the distinction of becoming the youngest full professor every appointed in the United States. In 1973 Fefferman returned to Princeton and, in 1984, he was appointed Herbert Jones Professor at Princeton. Fefferman contributed several innovations that revised the study of multidimensional complex analysis by finding correct generalisations of classical low-dimensional results. Fefferman's work on
Charles Fefferman Charles Fefferman. born April 18, 1949 in Silver Springs, Maryland.Child prodigy. USA's youngest full professor. Works in the fields http://scidiv.bcc.ctc.edu/Math/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Mathematics, music and chess seem to be the only fields in which true prodigies occur. Before he was 12 years old, Fefferman had guided tours at the Smithsonian, acted as a trouble-shooter for an auto mechanic, and mastered calculus. By 17 he had graduated with high honors from the University of Maryland, and at 20 he earned his Ph.D. from Princeton. At 22 the newly bearded "Charlie" became a full professor at the University of Chicago. By the time he was 24, he completed the work that earned him a Fields Medal (awarded every 4 years to a mathematician under 40) and a host of other honors. Fefferman's meteoric climb to prominence is not typical of even first-rate minds in any field. Fefferman enjoys playing chess ("I'm very bad like lots of distinguished mathematicians I know."), and he loves to sing along with classical music. He has even dabbled in a couple of presidential campaigns. Mostly, though, he wants "to do what all mathematicians do try to prove [new] theorems." He is also serious about teaching and is known for his ability to explain complicated ideas very simply. He has acquired the affectionate reputation of being an absent-minded professor, occasionally getting tricked into divulging test answers prematurely. He confesses that teaching saps a lot of his creative energy: "I'm psyched up about that, not the problem I'm trying to solve."
Charles Fefferman - Acapedia - Free Knowledge, For All acapedia.org home acapedia feedback. Friends of Acapedia Charles Fefferman. FromWikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (There is currently no text in this page). http://acapedia.org/aca/Charles_Fefferman
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NSenet - Navier-Stokes Equations On Net Farwig Reinhard (Germany), farwig@mathematik.tudarmstadt.de. fefferman charles (USA),cf@math.princeton.edu. Feireisl Eduard (Czech Republic), feireisl@math.cas.cz. http://wwwlma.univ-bpclermont.fr/NSenet/people/D.html
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Fefferman Charles Louis Fefferman. Born 18 April 1949 in Washington, DC, USA. MathematikerBild Show birthplace location. Charles Fefferman was a child prodigy. http://sfabel.tripod.com/mathematik/database/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Previous (Alphabetically) Next Welcome page Charles Fefferman was a child prodigy. It is claimed that he had mastered the calculus before the age of twelve. Fefferman entered the University of Maryland when he was very young and in 1966, at the age of 17, he graduated with the highest distinction. After graduating Fefferman undertook postgraduate work at Princeton University being awarded his PhD in 1969. He lectured at Princeton for the years 1969-70. He moved to the University of Chicago in 1970 and, one year later in 1971, he was promoted to full professor there, earning him the distinction of becoming the youngest full professor every appointed in the United States. In 1973 Fefferman returned to Princeton and, in 1984, he was appointed Herbert Jones Professor at Princeton. Fefferman contributed several innovations that revised the study of multidimensional complex analysis by finding correct generalisations of classical low-dimensional results. Fefferman's work on partial differential equations, Fourier analysis, in particular convergence, multipliers, divergence, singular integrals and
Fefferman Charles Louis Fefferman. 2001?4?. http://user.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~nn16023/fefferman.html
Charles Fefferman charles fefferman is Herbert Jones University Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University. http://www.austms.org.au/People/Conf/ANZ03/fefferman.html
Extractions: USA Topics: Analysis Charles Fefferman is Herbert Jones University Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University Professor Fefferman was educated at the University of Maryland and Princeton University, completing his PhD in 1969 (at the age of 20). After a short period at the University of Chicago, he has been based at Princeton since 1971. Fefferman's work in mathematical analysis has been recognised by numerous prestigious awards, including the Fields Medal (1978) and the Bergman Prize (1992). This work has covered a wide range of topics including multivariable complex analysis, partial differential equations, and harmonic analysis.
Encyclopædia Britannica fefferman, charles Louis Encyclopædia Britannica Article. MLA style fefferman,charles Louis. 2003 Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=98572
Charles Fefferman charles fefferman. Curriculum Vitae. Birthdate April 18 1949 http://www.math.princeton.edu/~koolaid/CharlieCV.html
Extractions: 1999- 2002 Chair, Department of Mathematics, Princeton University Visiting Positions Wilson Elkins Visiting Professorship, University of Maryland California Institute of Technology Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University University of Paris, France Mittag-Leffler Institute, Djursholm, Sweden Weitzmann Institute, Rehovot, Israel Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel Invited Lectures Harvard; Yale; Brandeis; Brown; Rutgers; Columbia; Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences,
Fefferman Biography of charles fefferman (19490BC) Next. Main index. charles fefferman was a child prodigy. http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Charles Fefferman was a child prodigy. It is claimed that he had mastered the calculus before the age of twelve. Fefferman entered the University of Maryland when he was very young and in 1966, at the age of 17, he graduated with the highest distinction. After graduating Fefferman undertook postgraduate work at Princeton University supervised by Elias Stein. He was awarded his PhD in 1969 for a thesis entitled Inequalities for Strongly Regular Convolution Operators. He lectured at Princeton for the years 1969-70. He moved to the University of Chicago in 1970 and, one year later in 1971, he was promoted to full professor there, earning him the distinction of becoming the youngest full professor every appointed in the United States. In 1973 Fefferman returned to Princeton and, in 1984, he was appointed Herbert Jones Professor at Princeton. Fefferman contributed several innovations that revised the study of multidimensional complex analysis by finding correct generalisations of classical low-dimensional results. Fefferman's work on
References For Fefferman References for charles fefferman. Biography in Encyclopaedia Britannica. ArticlesBergman Prize awarded to charles fefferman, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Bergman Prize awarded to Charles Fefferman, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. L Carleson, The work of Charles Fefferman, Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Helsinki 1978 (Helsinki, 1980), 53-56. S D Chatterji, On the mathematical work of Charles Fefferman, (Mannheim, 1979), 157-164. S Igari, Works of C Fefferman I (Japanese), Sugaku I Naruki, Works of C Fefferman II (Japanese), Sugaku J Moser, Fields medals III : A broad attack on analysis problems, Science Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
Charles Fefferman charles fefferman. born April 18, 1949 in Silver Springs, Maryland http://scidiv.bcc.ctc.edu/math/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Mathematics, music and chess seem to be the only fields in which true prodigies occur. Before he was 12 years old, Fefferman had guided tours at the Smithsonian, acted as a trouble-shooter for an auto mechanic, and mastered calculus. By 17 he had graduated with high honors from the University of Maryland, and at 20 he earned his Ph.D. from Princeton. At 22 the newly bearded "Charlie" became a full professor at the University of Chicago. By the time he was 24, he completed the work that earned him a Fields Medal (awarded every 4 years to a mathematician under 40) and a host of other honors. Fefferman's meteoric climb to prominence is not typical of even first-rate minds in any field. Fefferman enjoys playing chess ("I'm very bad like lots of distinguished mathematicians I know."), and he loves to sing along with classical music. He has even dabbled in a couple of presidential campaigns. Mostly, though, he wants "to do what all mathematicians do try to prove [new] theorems." He is also serious about teaching and is known for his ability to explain complicated ideas very simply. He has acquired the affectionate reputation of being an absent-minded professor, occasionally getting tricked into divulging test answers prematurely. He confesses that teaching saps a lot of his creative energy: "I'm psyched up about that, not the problem I'm trying to solve."
6th Australia New Zealand Mathematics Convention charles fefferman, Princeton University; (Analysis); Hillel Furstenberg, HebrewUniversity of Jerusalem; (Ergodic theory, Topological dynamics, Lie groups); http://www.austms.org.au/People/Conf/ANZ03/
Extractions: Darling Harbour, Sydney, 7-11 July 2003 The 6th Australia - New Zealand Mathematics Convention (6ANZMC) will take place as an embedded meeting within ICIAM 2003 The Convention will, in turn, incorporate the usual winter Annual Meeting of the Australian Mathematical Society. This meeting will be a once in a lifetime experience for Australian mathematicians. There will be about 2000 mathematicians at ICIAM, which is a four-yearly congress focusing on Industrial and Applied Mathematics. There will be a comprehensive academic program of Invited Lectures, Minisymposia, Contributed Papers and Poster Sessions. The 6ANZMC will be a top quality meeting in Pure Mathematics, but providing its participants the opportunity to enjoy the benefits of the entire ICIAM program. In addition to the twenty-seven ICIAM invited speakers , the local organising committee chaired by the Aust-NZ Mathematics Convention Director, David Hunt of UNSW, has been successful in attracting five invited speakers of international stature: Charles Fefferman , Princeton University;
Mathematical Folks Some biographical sketches of mathematicians, ancient and modern.Category Science Math Mathematicians Directories René Descartes. Perci Diaconis. Paul Erdös. Leonard Euler. charles fefferman.Evariste Galois. Paul Halmos. Edwin Hewitt. John Kemeny. Sonya Kovalevsky. http://scidiv.bcc.ctc.edu/Math/MathFolks.html
References For Fefferman References for the biography of charles fefferman Bergman Prize awarded to charles fefferman, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/References/Fefferman.html
Extractions: Bergman Prize awarded to Charles Fefferman, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. L Carleson, The work of Charles Fefferman, Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Helsinki 1978 (Helsinki, 1980), 53-56. S D Chatterji, On the mathematical work of Charles Fefferman, (Mannheim, 1979), 157-164. S Igari, Works of C Fefferman I (Japanese), Sugaku I Naruki, Works of C Fefferman II (Japanese), Sugaku J Moser, Fields medals III : A broad attack on analysis problems, Science Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index