Mariusz Wodzicki
Mariusz Wodzicki is a Polish mathematician, whose works primarily focus on analysis, algebraic k-theory, noncommutative geometry, and algebraic geometry.
Wodzicki completed his doctoral degree in 1984 at the Steklov Institute of Mathematics in Moscow under the advisement of Yuri Manin (Spectral Asymmetry and Zeta-Functions).[1] He is currently a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley.
In 1992, Wodzicki was an invited speaker of the European Congress of Mathematics in Paris (Algebraic K-theory and functional analysis). In 1994, he was an invited speaker of the International Congress of Mathematicians in Zürich (The algebra of functional analysis).[2]
Selection of writings
- with Ken Dykema, Tadeusz Figiel, Gary Weiss: Commutator structure of operator ideals. Adv. Math., Band 185, 2004, S. 1–79.
- Vestigia investiganda. Mosc. Math. J., Band 2, 2002, S. 769–798, 806.
- with K. Dykema, G. Weiss: Unitarily invariant trace extensions beyond the trace class. In: Complex analysis and related topics (Cuernavaca, 1996) Oper. Theory Adv. Appl. Band 114, 2000, S. 59–65
- with Andrei Suslin: Excision in algebraic K-theory, Annals of Mathematics, Band 136, 1992, S. 51–122
- Algebraic K-theory and functional analysis, ECM Paris 1992, Birkhäuser, Progress in Mathematics, 1994
References
- ↑ Mariusz Wodzicki at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ Not printed in the proceedings
External links
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