Christophe Soulé

Christophe Soulé
Christophe Soulé at Oberwolfach in 2005
Born 1951
Nationality France
Alma mater École Normale Supérieure
University of Paris
Known for Algebraic geometry, number theory
Awards Prize Ampère
Scientific career
Fields Mathematics
Doctoral advisors Roger Godement
Max Karoubi

Christophe Soulé (born 1951) is a French mathematician working in algebraic geometry and number theory.

Education

Soulé started his studies in 1970 at École Normale Supérieure in Paris. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of Paris in 1979 under the supervision of Max Karoubi and Roger Godement, with a dissertation titled K-Théorie des anneaux d'entiers de corps de nombres et cohomologie étale.

Awards and recognition

In 1979, he was awarded a CNRS Bronze Medal. He received the Prix J. Ponti in 1985 and the Prize Ampère in 1993.[1]

Since 2001, he is member of the French Academy of Sciences.[2] In 1983, he was invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM) in Warsaw.[3]

Publications

  • Christophe Soulé, with the collaboration of Dan Abramovich, Jean-François Burnol, and Jürg Kramer: Lectures on Arakelov Geometry. Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics 33. Cambridge University Press, 1992. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511623950, ISBN 0-521-41669-8
  • Henri Gillet, Christophe Soulé: An arithmetic Riemann–Roch Theorem, Inventiones Mathematicae 110 (1992), no. 3, 473–543. doi:10.1007/BF01231343, MR 1189489

References

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