James Cogdell

Last updated

James Wesley Cogdell (born 22 September 1953) is an American mathematician.

Contents

Education and career

He graduated from Yale University in 1977 with a bachelor's degree and in 1981 with a Ph.D. His doctoral dissertation Arithmetic Quotients of the Complex 2-Ball and Modular Forms of Nebentypus was supervised by Ilya Piatetski-Shapiro. [1] Cogdell was a postdoc at the University of Maryland and the University of California, Los Angeles. He was from 1982 to 1988 an assistant professor at Rutgers University. At Oklahoma State University he was from 1987 to 1988 assistant professor, from 1988 to 1994 an associate professor, and from 1994 to 2004 a full professor (from 1999 as Southwestern Bell Professor, from 2000 as Regents Professor, and from 2003 as Vaughan Foundation Professor). In 2004 he became a professor at Ohio State University. [2]

In autumn 1983 and for the academic year 1999–2000 he was at the Institute for Advanced Study. He has held visiting positions at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, at the University of Iowa, at Fields Institute, and at the Erwin Schrödinger International Institute for Mathematical Physics (where he gave the 2009 Erwin Schrödinger Lecture). [2]

Cogdell works on L-functions, automorphic forms (within the context of the Langlands program), and analytic number theory. In collaboration with Piatetski-Shapiro, he proved converse theorems for L-functions for the general linear groups . The goal is to characterize the L-functions that originate from automorphic forms. For this was solved by Hervé Jacquet and Robert Langlands and for by Jacquet, Piatetski-Shapiro and Joseph Shalika. The problem goes back to Erich Hecke's characterization of the Dirichlet series that come from modular forms.

In 2002 Cogdell was, with Piatetski-Shapiro, an Invited Speaker with talk Converse theorems, functoriality and applications to number theory at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Beijing. [3] He was an editor, with Simon Gindikin and Peter Sarnak, for Selected Works of Ilya Piatetski-Shapiro (2000, AMS). [4]

Cogdell was elected in 2012 a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society [5] and in 2016 a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. [6]

Selected publications

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Langlands</span> Canadian mathematician

Robert Phelan Langlands, is a Canadian mathematician. He is best known as the founder of the Langlands program, a vast web of conjectures and results connecting representation theory and automorphic forms to the study of Galois groups in number theory, for which he received the 2018 Abel Prize. He was an emeritus professor and occupied Albert Einstein's office at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, until 2020 when he retired.

In representation theory and algebraic number theory, the Langlands program is a web of far-reaching and influential conjectures about connections between number theory and geometry. Proposed by Robert Langlands, it seeks to relate Galois groups in algebraic number theory to automorphic forms and representation theory of algebraic groups over local fields and adeles. Widely seen as the single biggest project in modern mathematical research, the Langlands program has been described by Edward Frenkel as "a kind of grand unified theory of mathematics."

In harmonic analysis and number theory, an automorphic form is a well-behaved function from a topological group G to the complex numbers which is invariant under the action of a discrete subgroup of the topological group. Automorphic forms are a generalization of the idea of periodic functions in Euclidean space to general topological groups.

In mathematics, the Ramanujan conjecture, due to Srinivasa Ramanujan (1916, p.176), states that Ramanujan's tau function given by the Fourier coefficients τ(n) of the cusp form Δ(z) of weight 12

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ilya Piatetski-Shapiro</span> Russian mathematician

Ilya Piatetski-Shapiro was a Soviet-born Israeli mathematician. During a career that spanned 60 years he made major contributions to applied science as well as pure mathematics. In his last forty years his research focused on pure mathematics; in particular, analytic number theory, group representations and algebraic geometry. His main contribution and impact was in the area of automorphic forms and L-functions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter Sarnak</span>

Peter Clive Sarnak is a South African-born mathematician with dual South-African and American nationalities. Sarnak has been a member of the permanent faculty of the School of Mathematics at the Institute for Advanced Study since 2007. He is also Eugene Higgins Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University since 2002, succeeding Andrew Wiles, and is an editor of the Annals of Mathematics. He is known for his work in analytic number theory. He also sits on the Board of Adjudicators and the selection committee for the Mathematics award, given under the auspices of the Shaw Prize.

In mathematics, non-abelian class field theory is a catchphrase, meaning the extension of the results of class field theory, the relatively complete and classical set of results on abelian extensions of any number field K, to the general Galois extension L/K. While class field theory was essentially known by 1930, the corresponding non-abelian theory has never been formulated in a definitive and accepted sense.

Hervé Jacquet is a French American mathematician, working in automorphic forms. He is considered one of the founders of the theory of automorphic representations and their associated L-functions, and his results play a central role in modern number theory.

In the mathematical theory of automorphic representations, a multiplicity-one theorem is a result about the representation theory of an adelic reductive algebraic group. The multiplicity in question is the number of times a given abstract group representation is realised in a certain space, of square-integrable functions, given in a concrete way.

In mathematics, the Rankin–Selberg method, introduced by (Rankin 1939) and Selberg (1940), also known as the theory of integral representations of L-functions, is a technique for directly constructing and analytically continuing several important examples of automorphic L-functions. Some authors reserve the term for a special type of integral representation, namely those that involve an Eisenstein series. It has been one of the most powerful techniques for studying the Langlands program.

Freydoon Shahidi is an Iranian American mathematician who is a Distinguished Professor of Mathematics at Purdue University in the U.S. He is known for a method of automorphic L-functions which is now known as the Langlands–Shahidi method.

In the mathematical theory of automorphic forms, a converse theorem gives sufficient conditions for a Dirichlet series to be the Mellin transform of a modular form. More generally a converse theorem states that a representation of an algebraic group over the adeles is automorphic whenever the L-functions of various twists of it are well behaved.

In mathematics, the Langlands–Shahidi method provides the means to define automorphic L-functions in many cases that arise with connected reductive groups over a number field. This includes Rankin–Selberg products for cuspidal automorphic representations of general linear groups. The method develops the theory of the local coefficient, which links to the global theory via Eisenstein series. The resulting L-functions satisfy a number of analytic properties, including an important functional equation.

In representation theory, a branch of mathematics, θ10 is a cuspidal unipotent complex irreducible representation of the symplectic group Sp4 over a finite, local, or global field.

In mathematics, an automorphic L-function is a function L(s,π,r) of a complex variable s, associated to an automorphic representation π of a reductive group G over a global field and a finite-dimensional complex representation r of the Langlands dual group LG of G, generalizing the Dirichlet L-series of a Dirichlet character and the Mellin transform of a modular form. They were introduced by Langlands (1967, 1970, 1971).

In mathematics, the term standard L-function refers to a particular type of automorphic L-function described by Robert P. Langlands. Here, standard refers to the finite-dimensional representation r being the standard representation of the L-group as a matrix group.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stephen Gelbart</span> American-Israeli mathematician

Stephen Samuel Gelbart is an American-Israeli mathematician who holds the Nicki and J. Ira Harris Professorial Chair in mathematics at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel. He was named a fellow of the American Mathematical Society in 2013 "for contributions to the development and dissemination of the Langlands program."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stephen Rallis</span>

Stephen James Rallis was an American mathematician who worked on group representations, automorphic forms, the Siegel–Weil formula, and Langlands L-functions.

David Soudry is a professor of mathematics at Tel Aviv University working in number theory and automorphic forms.

Dihua Jiang is a professor of mathematics at the University of Minnesota working in number theory, automorphic forms, and the Langlands program.

References

  1. James Wesley Cogdell at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. 1 2 "James W. Cogdell". Ohio State University. (with online links for many of Cogdell's papers)
  3. Cogdell, J. W.; Piatetski-Shapiro, I. I. (2003). "Converse theorems, functoriality, and applications to number theory". arXiv: math/0304230 ; Journal reference: Proceedings of the ICM, Beijing 2002, vol. 2, 119–128{{cite arxiv}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  4. Piatetski-Shapiro, Ilya (2000). Cogdell, James; Gindikin, Simon; Sarnak, Peter (eds.). Selected Works of Ilya Piatetski-Shapiro. American Mathematical Soc. ISBN   978-0-8218-0930-3.
  5. "List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society". ams.org.
  6. "Historic Fellows". American Association for the Advancement of Science.