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Sylvain Cappell

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Nationality
  
Belgian American

Fields
  
Mathematics

Institutions
  
New York University

Doctoral advisor
  
William Browder

Name
  
Sylvain Cappell

Role
  
Mathematician



Alma mater
  
Princeton University Columbia University

Notable awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship (1989–90) Sloan Fellowship (1971–72)

Education
  
Princeton University (1969), Columbia University (1966)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

Doctoral students
  
Shmuel Weinberger

US maths professor Sylvain Cappell works on maths question


Sylvain Edward Cappell (born 1946), a Belgian American mathematician and former student of William Browder at Princeton University, is a topologist who has spent most of his career at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at NYU, where he is now the Silver Professor of Mathematics.

He was born in Brussels, Belgium and immigrated with his parents to New York City in 1950 and grew up largely in this city. In 1963, as a senior at the Bronx High School of Science, he won first place in the Westinghouse Science Talent Search for his work on "The Theory of Semi-cyclical Groups with Special Reference to Non-Aristotelian Logic." He is best known for his "codimension one splitting theorem", which is a standard tool in high-dimensional geometric topology, and a number of important results proven with his collaborator Julius Shaneson (now at the University of Pennsylvania). Their work includes many results in knot theory (and broad generalizations of that subject) and aspects of low-dimensional topology. They gave the first nontrivial examples of topological conjugacy of linear transformations, which led to a flowering of research on the topological study of spaces with singularities.

More recently, they combined their understanding of singularities, first to lattice point counting in polytopes, then to Euler-Maclaurin type summation formulae, and most recently to counting lattice points in the circle. This last problem is a classical one, initiated by Gauss, and the paper is still being vetted by experts.

In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.

References

Sylvain Cappell Wikipedia