Shing-Tung Yau

Shing-Tung Yau
Born (1949-04-04) April 4, 1949 (age 75)
Shantou, Guangdong, Republic of China
NationalityBritish Hong Kong (1949-1990), American (since 1990)
Alma materChinese University of Hong Kong
University of California, Berkeley (PhD)
Known for
SpouseYu-yun Kuo
ChildrenMichael Yau, Isaac Yau
AwardsJohn J. Carty Award (1981)
Veblen Prize (1981)
Fields Medal (1982)
Crafoord Prize (1994)
National Medal of Science (1997)
Wolf Prize (2010)
Shaw Prize (2023)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsTsinghua University
Harvard University

Stanford University
Stony Brook University
Institute for Advanced Study
Thesis On the Fundamental Group of Compact Manifolds of Non-Positive Curvature  (1971)
Doctoral advisorShiing-Shen Chern
Doctoral studentsRichard Schoen (Stanford, 1977)
Robert Bartnik (Princeton, 1983)
Mark Stern (Princeton, 1984)
Huai-Dong Cao (Princeton, 1986)
Gang Tian (Harvard, 1988)
Jun Li (Stanford, 1989)
Wanxiong Shi (Harvard, 1990)
Lizhen Ji (Northeastern, 1991)
Kefeng Liu (Harvard, 1993)
Mu-Tao Wang (Harvard, 1998)
Chiu-Chu Melissa Liu (Harvard, 2002)

Shing-Tung Yau (/j/; Chinese: 丘成桐; pinyin: Qiū Chéngtóng; born April 4, 1949) is a Chinese-American mathematician. He is the director of the Yau Mathematical Sciences Center at Tsinghua University and Professor Emeritus at Harvard University. Until 2022 he was the William Caspar Graustein Professor of Mathematics at Harvard, at which point he moved to Tsinghua.[1][2]

Yau was born in Swatow, Canton, Republic of China, moved to British Hong Kong at a young age, and then moved to the United States in 1969. He was awarded the Fields Medal in 1982, in recognition of his contributions to partial differential equations, the Calabi conjecture, the positive energy theorem, and the Monge–Ampère equation.[3] Yau is considered one of the major contributors to the development of modern differential geometry and geometric analysis. The impact of Yau's work are also seen in the mathematical and physical fields of convex geometry, algebraic geometry, enumerative geometry, mirror symmetry, general relativity, and string theory, while his work has also touched upon applied mathematics, engineering, and numerical analysis.

  1. ^ "Questions and answers with Shing-Tung Yau", Physics Today, 11 April 2016.
  2. ^ Ling, Xin (2022-04-21). "Chinese-born maths genius leaves Harvard to help China become a powerhouse on subject". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2022-04-22.
  3. ^ Albers, Donald J.; Alexanderson, G. L.; Reid, Constance. International Mathematical Congresses. An Illustrated History 1893-1986. Rev. ed. including ICM 1986. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1986

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