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William Goldman (mathematician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Goldman
William Goldman at Bar-Ilan University in 2008
Born (1955-11-17) November 17, 1955 (age 68)
Kansas City, United States
NationalityAmerican
Alma materPrinceton University
University of California, Berkeley
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Maryland-College Park
Doctoral advisorsMorris Hirsch
William Thurston

William Mark Goldman (born 1955 in Kansas City, Missouri) is a professor of mathematics at the University of Maryland, College Park (since 1986). He received a B.A. in mathematics from Princeton University in 1977, and a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1980.

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  • The problem in Good Will Hunting - Numberphile
  • Goldman Lecture Series - Extra Dimensions
  • Billionaire Mathematician - Numberphile

Transcription

DR. JAMES GRIME: Yeah, but like all mathematicians, he's tall, blond, and handsome. Yeah? Yeah? -Well, he's not tall or blond or-- is he? DR. JAMES GRIME: Yeah. -Is he? He's not tall. DR. JAMES GRIME: I don't know. I wasn't counting. I guess the choice of maths was arbitrary. They wanted to do a film about a troubled genius. And originally they were going to do physics genius. And then they were advised to pick a mathematical genius because it might work better with the script. It's a really good film. And the maths is less important. Should we talk about what they did in the film, the maths? -Yeah. DR. JAMES GRIME: All right, so we'll talk about that first. Near the beginning of the film, the MIT professor sets his students a challenge. Who can solve this? I put it on the blackboard in the corridor, and who can solve this problem? And it's taken MIT professors two years to solve this problem. Can you do it? Now, is it as hard as he made out? So what was the problem? If I say it first of all-- I'm going to say the problem that he gave the students. It might sound like Greek to you, because some of it is Greek. Right so then I'll say the problem. Then I'll tell you how it works. And it's a problem we can all do at home. I promise. So the problem is, draw all homeomorphically irreducible trees of size n equals 10. What does that mean? All right, let's try this out. These things are called trees. So I have trees. Instead of that, they are networks of dots and lines. So these are called graphs. It's like the London Underground map. So a network of dots and lines. So this is called a tree. And what's not allowed, what is banned is something like this. This is banned. This has a cycle in it, and cycles are banned. Now what was that other big word I said? Homeomorphically. That's the worst one. That's actually not so bad. That means if I did this, these two are the same picture. Can you see what I've done. I've just moved the dots slightly. So you can rotate them and reflect them. Or you could move them around slightly. But those two pictures would count as the same thing. And there was another clever word. There was the word irreducible in there. So that's another banned thing. Here this time what is banned is something like this. This is banned. Only two lines go into that dot. Which means pretty much nothing happens. You go in and you go out again. Nothing happens. There's no change. Nothing interesting here. So this is banned as well. Those are the rules. We want to do it for 10 dots. This is the problem Will Hunting had. 10 dots, how many ways are there to do it? I can tell you, there are 10 ways to do it. What I thought might be fun is if I did a couple of them, and maybe leave some for people to try and work out what I've left. No? -I want to see all of them. DR. JAMES GRIME: You want to see all of them? All right. So the first one is. So it's there. So if you can do that in less than two years, then you're better apparently than MIT professors. Or if you prefer, these are all the trees of size 10. Or this is a spider with nine legs and that's a guy with a funky Afro. I don't think that's a particularly-- I think people can do this at home. But the problem isn't the important thing. What I really would like to talk about is who was the real good Will Hunting. The story is, well-- so Will Hunting solves this problem. There is an urban legend that's similar of a student who ran into his exam late. And he copied down the problems from the board. And he went and solved them. And the last one seemed really hard. But he kept working on it. And he managed to solve it. And he handed in his exam paper. And then the professor rings him that night saying, you were only meant to do the first few problems. The last one was an unsolvable problem. Ah, you solved it.

Research contributions

Goldman has investigated geometric structures, in various incarnations, on manifolds since his undergraduate thesis, "Affine manifolds and projective geometry on manifolds", supervised by William Thurston and Dennis Sullivan. This work led to work with Morris Hirsch and David Fried on affine structures on manifolds, and work in real projective structures on compact surfaces. In particular he proved that the space of convex real projective structures on a closed orientable surface of genus is homeomorphic to an open cell of dimension . With Suhyoung Choi, he proved that this space is a connected component (the "Hitchin component") of the space of equivalence classes of representations of the fundamental group in . Combining this result with Suhyoung Choi's convex decomposition theorem, this led to a complete classification of convex real projective structures on compact surfaces.

His doctoral dissertation, "Discontinuous groups and the Euler class" (supervised by Morris W. Hirsch), characterizes discrete embeddings of surface groups in in terms of maximal Euler class, proving a converse to the Milnor–Wood inequality for flat bundles. Shortly thereafter he showed that the space of representations of the fundamental group of a closed orientable surface of genus in has connected components, distinguished by the Euler class.

With David Fried, he classified compact quotients of Euclidean 3-space by discrete groups of affine transformations, showing that all such manifolds are finite quotients of torus bundles over the circle. The noncompact case is much more interesting, as Grigory Margulis found complete affine manifolds with nonabelian free fundamental group. In his 1990 doctoral thesis, Todd Drumm found examples which are solid handlebodies using polyhedra which have since been called "crooked planes."

Goldman found examples (non-Euclidean nilmanifolds and solvmanifolds) of closed 3-manifolds which fail to admit flat conformal structures.

Generalizing Scott Wolpert's work on the Weil–Petersson symplectic structure on the space of hyperbolic structures on surfaces, he found an algebraic-topological description of a symplectic structure on spaces of representations of a surface group in a reductive Lie group. Traces of representations of the corresponding curves on the surfaces generate a Poisson algebra, whose Lie bracket has a topological description in terms of the intersections of curves. Furthermore, the Hamiltonian vector fields of these trace functions define flows generalizing the Fenchel–Nielsen flows on Teichmüller space. This symplectic structure is invariant under the natural action of the mapping class group, and using the relationship between Dehn twists and the generalized Fenchel–Nielsen flows, he proved the ergodicity of the action of the mapping class group on the SU(2)-character variety with respect to symplectic Lebesgue measure.

Following suggestions of Pierre Deligne, he and John Millson proved that the variety of representations of the fundamental group of a compact Kähler manifold has singularities defined by systems of homogeneous quadratic equations. This leads to various local rigidity results for actions on Hermitian symmetric spaces.

With John Parker, he examined the complex hyperbolic ideal triangle group representations. These are representations of hyperbolic ideal triangle groups to the group of holomorphic isometries of the complex hyperbolic plane such that each standard generator of the triangle group maps to a complex reflection and the products of pairs of generators to parabolics. The space of representations for a given triangle group (modulo conjugacy) is parametrized by a half-open interval. They showed that the representations in a particular range were discrete and conjectured that a representation would be discrete if and only if it was in a specified larger range. This has become known as the Goldman–Parker conjecture and was eventually proven by Richard Schwartz.

Professional service

Goldman also heads a research group at the University of Maryland called the Experimental Geometry Lab, a team developing software (primarily in Mathematica) to explore geometric structures and dynamics in low dimensions. He served on the Board of Governors for The Geometry Center at the University of Minnesota from 1994 to 1996.

He served as Editor-In-Chief of Geometriae Dedicata from 2003 until 2013.

Awards and honors

In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[1]

Publications

  • Goldman, William M. (1999). Complex hyperbolic geometry. Oxford Mathematical Monographs. Oxford Science Publications. New York: The Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press. xx+316 pp. ISBN 0-19-853793-X. MR 1695450.
  • Goldman, William M.; Xia, Eugene Z. (2008). "Rank one Higgs bundles and representations of fundamental groups of Riemann surfaces". Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society. 193 (904): viii+69 pp. arXiv:math/0402429. doi:10.1090/memo/0904. ISSN 0065-9266. MR 2400111. S2CID 2865489.

References

External links

This page was last edited on 7 April 2024, at 09:57
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