Christoph Thiele

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Christoph Thiele

Christoph Thiele (born September 10, 1968 in Darmstadt ) is a German mathematician who deals with analysis .

In 1987, Thiele won first prize at the federal mathematics competition and took part in the International Physics Olympics in Jena . He then studied physics and mathematics at the TH Darmstadt and the University of Bielefeld (diploma in mathematics 1992), from 1989 to 1993 as a scholarship holder of the German Research Foundation. In 1995 he did his doctorate at Yale University under Ronald Coifman and was then a research assistant at the University of Kiel , where he completed his habilitation in 1999. From 1998 he was Assistant Professor , from 2000 Associate Professor and from 2002 Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Since 2012 he has held one of the Hausdorff Chairs (W3 professorship) created as part of the Excellence Initiative at the Mathematical Institute of the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn.

Thiele deals with real analysis, harmonic analysis , scattering theory , ergodic theory .

In 2000, together with Michael T. Lacey , he gave a simplified proof of Lennart Carleson's theorem about the convergence ( almost everywhere ) of the Fourier series of square-integrable functions.

In 1996 he received the Salem Prize with Michael Lacey for her work on the bilinear Hilbert transformation by Alberto Calderón and the development of a new method of phase space analysis. He was invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM) in Beijing in 2002 (Singular Integrals meet Modulation Invariance). He is a fellow of the American Mathematical Society .

He is married and has four kids.

Fonts

  • Wave packet analysis . American Mathematical Society, 2006

Web links

References

  1. ^ Lacey, Thiele, A proof of boundedness of the Carleson operator , Mathematical Research Letters, Vol. 7, 2000, pp. 361-370.