Andrew Casson

Andrew Casson
Andrew Casson at Berkeley in 1991
Photo courtesy George M. Bergman
Born 1943 (age 7475)
Alma mater University of Liverpool
Awards Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry (1991)
Fellow of the Royal Society (1998)
Scientific career
Fields Mathematics
Institutions Yale University
University of California, Berkeley
University of Texas at Austin
Doctoral advisor C. T. C. Wall
Doctoral students Daniel Allcock
Stephen Bigelow
Danny Calegari
Greg Kuperberg
Mahan Mitra
Andrew Ranicki

Andrew John Casson FRS (born 1943) is a mathematician, studying geometric topology.

Casson is the Philip Schuyler Beebe Professor of Mathematics[1] at Yale University in the United States where he served as department chair between 2004 and 2007. His Ph.D. advisor at the University of Liverpool was C. T. C. Wall, but he never completed his doctorate; instead what would have been his Ph.D. thesis became his fellowship dissertation as a research fellow at Trinity College, Cambridge. He was Professor of Mathematics at the University of Texas at Austin between 1981 and 1986, at the University of California, Berkeley, from 1986 to 2000, and has been at Yale since 2000.

In 1991, he was awarded the Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry by the American Mathematical Society. In 1998 he was elected to Fellowship of the Royal Society.

Casson has worked in both high-dimensional manifold topology and 3- and 4-dimensional topology, using both geometric and algebraic techniques. Among other discoveries, he contributed to the disproof of the manifold Hauptvermutung, introduced the Casson invariant, a modern invariant for 3-manifolds, and Casson handles, used in Michael Freedman's proof of the 4-dimensional Poincaré conjecture.

References


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