Dmitry Feichtner-Kozlov

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Dmitry Feichtner-Kozlov

Dmitry Feichtner-Kozlov , also Dmitry Kozlov, (born December 16, 1972 in Tomsk ) is a German-Russian mathematician who deals with combinatorics and is a professor at the University of Bremen .

Dmitry Feichtner-Kozlov received his doctorate from the Royal Technical University in Stockholm in 1996 with Anders Björner (Extremal Combinatorics, Weighting Algorithms, and Topology of Subspaces Arrangements) . He then worked at MSRI , the Massachusetts Institute of Technology , the Institute for Advanced Study , the University of Washington in Seattle, the University of Bern and Stockholm before becoming an assistant professor at ETH Zurich in 2004. In 2007 he became professor for algebra and geometry at the University of Bremen, where he is director of the institute for algebra, geometry, topology and their applications.

He dealt with topological combinatorics , combinatorial aspects of geometry and topology and computer science (distributed computing).

In 2003 he received the Wallenberg Prize, in 2004 the Göran Gustafsson Prize and in 2005 the European Prize in Combinatorics .

He is editor of the Journal of Applied and Computational Topology.

Fonts

  • with Maurice Herlihy , Sergio Rajsbaum: Distributed Computing through Combinatorial Topology, Elsevier 2013
  • Combinatorial Algebraic Topology, Springer-Verlag, 2008
  • with Eric Babson: Proof of the Lovász Conjecture, Annals of Mathematics, Volume 165, 2007, pp. 965-1007. Arxiv
  • Chromatic numbers, morphism complexes, and Stiefel-Whitney characteristic classes, in: IAS / Park City Mathematics Series 14, Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI; Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ, 2007, pp. 262-330.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Dmitry Feichtner-Kozlov in the Mathematics Genealogy Project (English)Template: MathGenealogyProject / Maintenance / id used