Allen Knutson | |
---|---|
Born | Allen Ivar Knutson |
Academic background | |
Education | California Institute of Technology (BS) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (PhD) |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Mathematics |
Institutions |
Allen Ivar Knutson is an American mathematician who is a professor of mathematics at Cornell University.[1]
Education
Knutson completed his undergraduate studies at the California Institute of Technology[2] and received a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1996 under the joint advisorship of Victor Guillemin and Lisa Jeffrey.[3]
Career
He was on the faculty at the University of California, Berkeley before moving to the University of California, San Diego in 2005 and then to Cornell University in 2009.[4] In 2005, he and Terence Tao won the Levi L. Conant Prize of the American Mathematical Society for their paper "Honeycombs and Sums of Hermitian Matrices".[5]
Knutson is also known for his studies of the mathematics of juggling.[6] For five years beginning in 1990, he and fellow Caltech student David Morton held a world record for passing 12 balls.[2]
References
- ↑ Faculty profile, Cornell University, accessed 2021-06-08.
- 1 2 Donahue, Bill (December 2004), "The Mathematics of . . . Juggling: An algebra whiz reveals the secrets of keeping a lot of balls in the air", Discover.
- ↑ Allen Ivar Knutson at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ Department history Archived 2019-06-09 at the Wayback Machine, UCSD mathematics department, accessed 2012-06-20.
- ↑ 2005 Conant Prize, AMS, accessed 2012-06-20.
- ↑ The mathematics of juggling one-hour YouTube lecture