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Robert Kottwitz

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Edward Robert Kottwitz (born 1950 in Lynn, Massachusetts)[1] is an American mathematician.

Kottwitz studied at the University of Washington (BA) and then went to the Harvard University, where he received his Ph.D. in 1977 under the supervision of Phillip Griffiths and John T. Tate (Orbital Integrals on ).[2] In 1976 he was assistant professor and later professor at the University of Washington and went in 1989 as a professor to the University of Chicago.

He was several times at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton (for example, 1976 and 1977).

Kottwitz works in the Langlands program, including harmonic analysis on p-adic Lie groups and automorphic forms and the general linear groups and Shimura varieties.[3]

He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Mathematical Society (AMS).[4] He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berlin in 1998 (Harmonic analysis on semisimple Lie p-adic algebras).

Writings

  • With James Arthur, David Ellwood (editor): Harmonic analysis, the trace formula and Shimura varieties, Proc. Clay Mathematics Institute, 2003 Summer School, The Fields Institute, Toronto, June 2003, AMS 2005
  • WIth Diana Shelstad Foundations of Twisted Endoscopy, Astérisque, 255, 1999

References

  1. ^ member book of IAS in 1980
  2. ^ Robert Kottwitz at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. ^ Laurent Clozel Nombre de points des variétés de Shimura sur un corps fini, d'après R. Kottwitz, Séminaire Bourbaki 766, 1992/93
  4. ^ List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2013-11-27.

External links