Fred Diamond
Fred Diamond | |
---|---|
Born | November 19, 1964 |
Residence | London |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | King's College London Columbia University MIT Rutgers IAS Princeton IHES |
Alma mater | Princeton University Michigan |
Doctoral advisor | Andrew Wiles |
Known for | Number Theory |
Influences | Andrew Wiles |
Notable awards | AMS Centennial Fellowship[1] |
Fred Irvin Diamond (born November 19, 1964)[2] is a mathematician, known for his role in proving the modularity theorem for elliptic curves.[3] His research interest is in modular forms and Galois representations.
Diamond received his B.A. from the University of Michigan in 1983,[4] and received his Ph.D. in mathematics from Princeton University in 1988 as a doctoral student of Andrew Wiles.[4][5] He has held positions at Brandeis University and Rutgers University, and is currently a professor at King's College London.[4]
Diamond is the author of several research papers, and is also a coauthor along with Jerry Shurman of A First Course in Modular Forms, in the Graduate Texts in Mathematics series published by Springer-Verlag.[6][7][8]
References
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- ↑ Fred Irvin Diamond at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ Review of A First Course in Modular Forms by Daniel Bump (2005), SIAM Review 47 (4): 813–816, JSTOR 20453715.
- ↑ Review of A First Course in Modular Forms by Henri Darmon (2006), MR 2112196.
- ↑ Review of A First Course in Modular Forms by Fernando Q. Gouvêa (2007), American Mathematical Monthly 114 (1): 85–90, JSTOR 27642138.
External links
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- Use mdy dates from October 2013
- 1964 births
- Living people
- Number theorists
- 20th-century American mathematicians
- 21st-century American mathematicians
- Princeton University alumni
- University of Michigan alumni
- Ohio State University faculty
- Brandeis University faculty
- Academics of King's College London
- Place of birth missing (living people)
- Fermat's Last Theorem
- Mathematician stubs