André Hirschowitz

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André Hirschowitz (* 1944 in Lyon ) is a French mathematician who studies algebraic geometry and analysis .

Hirschowitz studied from 1964 at the École normal supérieure , was an assistant in Nice from 1967, conducted research for the CNRS from 1970 to 1972 , after which he received his doctorate in 1972 under André Martineau (Convexité en géométrie analytique). In 1972 he became professor 2nd class in Nice and in 1980 professor 1st class. In 1991 he became Professeur de class exceptionelle. From 1992 to 1996 he was Research Director of the CNRS.

His main field of work is algebraic geometry. He has published with Robin Hartshorne , Adrien Douady , MS Narasimhan , S. Ramanan , Carlos Simpson and in Germany with Lothar Göttsche , Otto Forster , Michael Schneider and Klaus Hulek and published in 1972 under the collective pseudonym Serge Baryton. In the 1970s he also published on functional theory of several complex variables and most recently on automatic proof systems ( Coq ) and mathematical logic (logic of games).

In 1998 he founded the French Research Network for Algebraic Geometry (GAC).

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References and comments

  1. André Hirschowitz in the Mathematics Genealogy Project (English)Template: MathGenealogyProject / Maintenance / id used
  2. Partly with his sons Michel and Tom Hirschowitz, who are computer scientists