Jump to content

Danny Calegari

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Danny Calegari
Danny Calegari
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley
University of Melbourne
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Chicago
Thesis Foliations and the Geometry of Three-Manifolds  (2000)
Doctoral advisorAndrew Casson
William Thurston
Notes
Brother of Frank Calegari

Danny Matthew Cornelius Calegari is a mathematician and, as of 2023, a professor of mathematics at the University of Chicago. His research interests include geometry, dynamical systems, low-dimensional topology, and geometric group theory.

Education and career

[edit]

In 1994, Calegari received a B.A. in Mathematics from the University of Melbourne with honors. He received his Ph.D. in 2000 from the University of California, Berkeley under the joint supervision of Andrew Casson and William Thurston; his dissertation concerned foliations of three-dimensional manifolds.[1]

From 2000–2002 he was Benjamin Peirce Assistant Professor at Harvard University, after which he joined the California Institute of Technology faculty; he became Merkin Professor in 2007. He was a University Professor of Pure Mathematics at the University of Cambridge in 2011–2012, and has been a Professor of Mathematics at the University of Chicago since 2012.[2]

Calegari is also an author of short fiction, published in Quadrant, Southerly, and Overland. His story A Green Light was a winner of a 1992 The Age Short Story Award.[3]

Awards

[edit]

Calegari was one of the recipients of the 2009 Clay Research Award for his solution to the Marden Tameness Conjecture and the Ahlfors Measure Conjecture.[4] In 2011 he was awarded a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award,[5] and in 2012, he became a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[6] In 2012 he delivered the Namboodiri Lectures[7] at the University of Chicago, and in 2013 he delivered the Blumenthal Lectures[8] at Tel Aviv University. In 2022 he gave an invited lecture[9] at the ICM and in 2024 he gave the Floer Lectures[10] in Bochum and the Roever Lecture[11] at Washington University in St. Louis.

Selected works

[edit]

Personal life

[edit]

Mathematician Frank Calegari is Danny Calegari's brother.[12]

References

[edit]
[edit]