Shinzo Watanabe

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Shinzō Watanabe ( Japanese 渡 辺 信 三 , Watanabe Shinzō ; * December 23, 1935 ) is a Japanese mathematician who deals with probability theory , stochastic processes and stochastic differential equations.

Watanabe studied at Kyoto University with a bachelor's degree in 1958 and a doctorate with Itō Kiyoshi in 1963. He was a professor in Kyoto. He also taught at Stanford and was co-organizer of Japanese-Soviet seminars on probability theory.

With Hiroshi Kunita , he proved the Kunita-Watanabe inequality in 1967 .

In 1989 he received the Autumn Prize of the Japanese Mathematical Society . In 1983 he was invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Warsaw (Excursion point processes and diffusion).

Fonts

  • with Noboyuki Ikeda Stochastic differential equations and diffusion processes , North Holland, 1981, 2nd edition 1989
  • with Toshio Yamada On the uniqueness of solutions of stochastic differential equations , J. Math. Kyoto University, 11, 1971, 155-167
  • A limit theorem of branching processes and continuous state branching processes, J. Math. Kyoto University, 8, 1968, 141-167
  • Limit theorem for a class of branching processes, in: Markov processes potential theory, Proc. Symp. Univ. Wisconsin, Madison, 1967, 205-232

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Shinzō Watanabe in the Mathematics Genealogy Project (English)Template: MathGenealogyProject / Maintenance / id used
  2. Kunito, Watanabe, On square integrable Martingales, Nagoya Math. J., Volume 30, 1967, pp. 209-245