Askold Khovanskii

Russian and Canadian mathematician (born 1947) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Askold Georgievich Khovanskii (Russian: Аскольд Георгиевич Хованский; born 3 June 1947, Moscow) is a Russian and Canadian mathematician currently a professor of mathematics at the University of Toronto, Canada.[1] His areas of research are algebraic geometry, commutative algebra, singularity theory, differential geometry and differential equations. His research is in the development of the theory of toric varieties and Newton polyhedra in algebraic geometry. He is also the inventor of the theory of fewnomials, and the Bernstein–Khovanskii–Kushnirenko theorem is named after him.

Born (1947-06-03) 3 June 1947 (age 78)
Moscow, Russia
KnownforFewnomial theory, Bernstein–Khovanskii–Kushnirenko theorem, Newton polyhedra theory, toric varieties, Lawrence–Khovanskii–Pukhlikov theorem, topological Galois theory
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Askold Khovanskii
Born (1947-06-03) 3 June 1947 (age 78)
Moscow, Russia
Alma materMoscow State University
Steklov Mathematical Institute
Known forFewnomial theory, Bernstein–Khovanskii–Kushnirenko theorem, Newton polyhedra theory, toric varieties, Lawrence–Khovanskii–Pukhlikov theorem, topological Galois theory
AwardsJeffery–Williams Prize (2014)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Toronto
Independent University of Moscow
Thesis Representability of Function in Quadratures  (1973)
Vladimir Arnold
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He obtained his Ph.D. in 1973 from Steklov Mathematical Institute in Moscow under the supervision of Vladimir Arnold.[2] In his Ph.D. thesis, he developed a topological version of Galois theory. He studies the theory of Newton–Okounkov bodies, or Okounkov bodies for short.

Among his graduate students are Olga Gel'fond, Feodor Borodich, H. Petrov-Tan'kin, Kiumars Kaveh,[3] Farzali Izadi, Ivan Soprunov,[4] Jenya Soprunova,[5] Vladlen Timorin,[6] Valentina Kirichenko,[7] Sergey Chulkov, V. Kisunko, Mikhail Mazin,[8] O. Ivrii, K. Matveev, Yuri Burda, and J. Yang.

In 2014, he received the Jeffery–Williams Prize of the Canadian Mathematical Society for outstanding contributions to mathematical research in Canada.[9] He was elected to the Royal Society of Canada in 2020.[10]

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