Takurō Mochizuki

Takurō Mochizuki

Takurō Mochizuki (望月 拓郎, born 28 August 1972) of Kyoto University is a Japanese mathematician, whose research follows the Bourbaki style of generality and rigor. He was awarded the Japan Academy Prize in 2011 for his research on D-modules in algebraic analysis.[1][2] In 2014 he was a plenary speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians.[3]

As a student at the University of Kyoto in 1994, Mochizuki left his undergraduate early to become a graduate student in mathematics at the same university. He completed his Ph.D. in 1999, and joined the faculty of Osaka City University, returning to Kyoto in 2004.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Professor Emeritus Masahiro Shogaito and Associate Professor Takuro Mochizuki of the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences Receive the Japan Academy Prize, Kyoto University, April 12, 2011, retrieved 2015-08-01 .
  2. Japan Academy Prize to: Takuro Mochizuki (PDF), Japan Academy, retrieved 2015-08-01 .
  3. "Schedule of Plenary Lectures", Seoul ICM 2014, archived from the original on 2015-07-16, retrieved 2015-08-01 .

Further reading

  • Sabbah, Claude (January 2012), "Théorie de Hodge et correspondance de Hitchin-Kobayashi sauvages (d'après T. Mochizuki)" (PDF), Séminaire Bourbaki (in French), 1050: 1–36, MR 3087348 . Also in Astérisque No. 352 (2013), Exp. No. 1050, viii, 205–241, ISBN 978-2-85629-371-3.
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