Thomas Wolff
Thomas Hartwig Wolff (July 14, 1954,
New York City – July 31, 2000,
Kern County) was an American mathematician, working primarily in the fields of
harmonic analysis,
complex analysis, and
partial differential equations. As an undergraduate at
Harvard University, he regularly played poker with his classmate
Bill Gates. While a graduate student at the
University of California, Berkeley from 1976 to 1979, under the direction of
Donald Sarason, he obtained a new proof of the
corona theorem, a famously difficult theorem in
complex analysis. He was made Professor of Mathematics at
Caltech in 1986, and was there from 1988–1992 and from 1995 to his death in a car accident in 2000. He also held positions at the
University of Washington,
University of Chicago,
New York University, and
University of California, Berkeley.
He received the
Salem Prize in 1985 and the
Bôcher Memorial Prize in 1999, for his contributions to analysis and particularly to the
Kakeya conjecture. He was an Invited Speaker at the
International Congress of Mathematicians in 1986 in Berkeley and in 1998 in Berlin.
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