Pavel Etingof

Pavel Etingof Ilyich (born 1969 ) is a Russian- American mathematician.

Etingof received his degree in applied mathematics in 1989 at the Oil and Gas Institute in Moscow, then moved to the U.S. in 1994 and was a PhD with Igor Frenkel at Yale University ( Representation Theory and holonomic system ). After that, he was Benjamin Peirce Assistant Professor at Harvard University and, from 1998 assistant professor and in 2005 professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

Etingof research at the interface of mathematical physics (exactly integrable systems) and representation theory, for example on quantum groups.

In 1999 he was a Fellow of the Clay Mathematics Institute.

In 2002 he was invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Beijing ( On the dynamical Yang -Baxter Equation). He is a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.

Writings

  • Equation with Frédéric Latour The dynamical Yang - Baxter, representation theory, and quantum integrable systems, Oxford University Press 2005
  • With Igor Frenkel, Alexander Kirillov, Jr. Lectures on representation theory and Knizhnik - Zamolodchikov equations, American Mathematical Society 1998
  • Alexander Nikolayevich Wartschenko Why the boundary of a round drop Becomes a curve of order four, American Mathematical Society 1992
  • Calogero -Moser Systems and Representation Theory, European Mathematical Society in 2007 ( Zurich Lecture Notes in Advanced Mathematics )
  • With other Introduction to Representation Theory, Student Mathematical Library, American Mathematical Society 2011
  • Publisher with other The unity of mathematics: in honor of the ninetieth birthday of IM Gelfand, Birkhäuser 2006
  • As editor: Quantum Groups ( Conference Technion 2004), American Mathematical Society 2007
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