Robert L. Bryant | |
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Born | Robert Leamon Bryant August 30, 1953 Kipling, North Carolina, U.S. |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | North Carolina State University at Raleigh University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Known for | Bryant surface Bryant soliton |
Awards | Sloan Research Fellowship, 1982 |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | Duke University University of California, Berkeley Rice University Mathematical Sciences Research Institute |
Thesis | Some Aspects of the Local and Global Theory of Pfaffian Systems (1979) |
Doctoral advisor | Robert Brown Gardner |
Doctoral students | Jeanne N. Clelland |
Website | fds |
Robert Leamon Bryant (born August 30, 1953) is an American mathematician. He works at Duke University and specializes in differential geometry. [2]
Bryant grew up in a farming family in Harnett County and was a first-generation college student. [3] He obtained a bachelor's degree at North Caroline State University at Raleigh in 1974 and a PhD at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1979. His thesis was entitled "Some Aspects of the Local and Global Theory of Pfaffian Systems" and was written under the supervision of Robert Gardner. [4]
He worked at Rice University for seven years, as assistant professor (1979–1981), associate professor (1981–1982) and full professor (1982–1986). He then moved to Duke University, where he worked for twenty years as J. M. Kreps Professor.
Between 2007 and 2013 he worked as full professor at University of California, Berkeley, where he served as the director of the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI). [5] In 2013 he returned to Duke University as Phillip Griffiths Professor of Mathematics.
Bryant was awarded in 1982 a Sloan Research Fellowship. [6] In 1986 he was invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berkeley. [7]
He was elected in 2002 a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, [8] in 2007 a member of the National Academy of Sciences, [9] in 2013 a fellow of the American Mathematical Society [10] and in 2022 a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. [11] [12] He is also a member of the Association for Women in Mathematics, the National Association of Mathematicians and the Mathematical Association of America. [13]
He served as the president of the American Mathematical Society for the 2-years term 2015–2016, [14] [3] for which he was the first openly gay president. [3] [15]
Bryant is on the board of directors of EDGE, a transition program for women entering graduate studies in the mathematical sciences. [16] He is also a board member of Spectra, an association for LGBT mathematicians that he helped to create. [17] [18]
Bryant's research has been influenced by Élie Cartan, Shiing-Shen Chern, and Phillip Griffiths. [3] His research interests cover many areas in Riemannian geometry, geometry of PDEs, Finsler geometry and mathematical physics. [19]
In 1987 he proved several properties of surfaces of unit constant mean curvature in hyperbolic space, which are now called Bryant surfaces in his honour. [20] In 2001 he contributed many advancements to the theory of Bochner-Kähler metrics, the class of Kähler metrics whose Bochner curvature vanishes. [21]
In 1987 he produced the first examples of Riemannian metrics with exceptional holonomy (i.e. whose holonomy groups are G2 or Spin(7)); this showed that every group in Marcel Berger's classification can arise as a holonomy group. [22] Later, he also contributed to the classification of exotic holonomy groups of arbitrary (i.e. non-Riemannian) torsion-free affine connections. [23] [24]
Together with Phillip Griffiths and others co-authors, Bryant developed the modern theory of Exterior Differential Systems, writing two influential monographs, which have become the standard reference in the topic. [25] [26] He also worked on their cohomology [27] [28] and applications to PDEs. [29] [30]
He is author of more than 60 papers, [31] [32] and he has supervised 26 PhD students. [4]
Bryant and David Morrison are the editors of vol. 4 of the Selected Works of Phillip Griffiths.
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Shiu-Yuen Cheng (鄭紹遠) is a Hong Kong mathematician. He is currently the Chair Professor of Mathematics at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Cheng received his Ph.D. in 1974, under the supervision of Shiing-Shen Chern, from University of California at Berkeley. Cheng then spent some years as a post-doctoral fellow and assistant professor at Princeton University and the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Then he became a full professor at University of California at Los Angeles. Cheng chaired the Mathematics departments of both the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology in the 1990s. In 2004, he became the Dean of Science at HKUST. In 2012, he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.
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