John B. Garnett

John B. Garnett ( born 1940 in Seattle, Washington) is an American mathematician who is busy with Analysis (function theory, harmonic analysis ).

Garnett studied at the University of Notre Dame ( BA 1962) and received his doctorate in 1966 at Irving Glicksberg at the University of Washington. He then spent two years Moore Instructor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and went in 1968 as an assistant professor at UCLA, where he is a professor since 1974. From 1995 to 1997 he was chairman of the mathematics department. In 1989 he received the Distinguished Teaching Award from UCLA. He has been a visiting professor and visiting scientist at the IHES, Yale University, the ETH Zurich, the University of Paris-Sud.

In 2003 he received the Leroy P. Steele Prize for his book " Bounded analytic functions", in which he portrayed the area using methods of harmonic analysis, function-theoretic methods, and the Calderon - Zygmund theory in a novel way and that as well in both its teaching research was influential. In 1986 he was Invited Lecturer on the ICM, Berkeley.

His doctoral Jill Pipher heard.

Writings

  • Bounded analytic functions, Academic Press 1981
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