Doctor Honoris Causa of ENS de Lyon - June 5, 2012
Biography
John Norman Mather (June 9, 1942 – January 28, 2017) was a mathematician at Princeton University known for his work on singularity theory and Hamiltonian dynamics. He was descended from Atherton Mather (1663–1734), a cousin of Cotton Mather. His early work dealt with the stability of smooth mappings between smooth manifolds of dimensions n (for the source manifold N) and p (for the target manifold P). He determined the precise dimensions (n,p) for which smooth mappings are stable with respect to smooth equivalence by diffeomorphisms of the source and target (i.e., infinitely differentiable coordinate changes).
He also proved the conjecture of the French topologist René Thom that under topological equivalence smooth mappings are generically stable: the subset of the space of smooth mappings between two smooth manifolds consisting of the topologically stable mappings is a dense subset in the smooth Whitney topology. His notes on the topic of topological stability are still a standard reference on the topic of topologically stratified spaces.
In the 1970s, he switched to the field of dynamical systems. He made the following main contributions to dynamical systems that deeply influenced the field.
- He introduced the concept of Mather spectrum and gave a characterization of Anosov diffeomorphisms.
- Jointly with Richard McGehee, he gave an example of collinear four-body problem which has initial conditions leading to solutions that blow up in finite time. This was the first result that made the Painlevé conjecture plausible.[2]
- He developed a variational theory for the globally action minimizing orbits for twist maps (convex Hamiltonian systems of two degrees of freedom), along the line of the work of George David Birkhoff, Marston Morse, Gustav A. Hedlund, et al. This theory is now known as Aubry–Mather theory.
- He developed the Aubry–Mather theory in higher dimensions, a theory which is now called Mather theory. This theory turned out to be deeply related to the viscosity solution theory of Michael G. Crandall, Pierre-Louis Lions et al. for Hamilton–Jacobi equation. The link was revealed in the weak KAM theory of Albert Fathi.
Mather was one of the three editors of the Annals of Mathematics Studies series published by Princeton University Press.
Awards and distinctions
Member of the National Academy of Sciences beginning in 1988.
John J. Carty Award of the National Academy of Sciences in 1978 (for pure mathematics)
George David Birkhoff Prize in applied mathematics in 2003
Brazilian Order of Scientific Merit in 2000
Brouwer Medal from the Royal Dutch Mathematical Society in 2014
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