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Victor Kolyvagin

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Nationality
  
Russian

Fields
  
Mathematics


Role
  
Mathematician

Name
  
Victor Kolyvagin

Doctoral advisor
  
Yuri Manin

Institutions
  
Johns Hopkins University, CUNY

Alma mater
  
Moscow State University

Doctoral students
  
Heuisu Ryu Alexandru Tupan

Education
  
Moscow State University

Victor Alexandrovich Kolyvagin (Russian: Ви́ктор Алекса́ндрович Колыва́гин) is a Russian mathematician who wrote a series of papers on Euler systems, leading to breakthroughs on the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture, and Iwasawa's conjecture for cyclotomic fields. His work also influenced Andrew Wiles's work on Fermat's Last Theorem.

Kolyvagin received his Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1981 from Moscow State University, where his advisor was Yuri I. Manin. He then worked at Steklov Institute of Mathematics in Moscow until 1994. In 1990 he received the Chebyshev Prize of the USSR Academy of Sciences.

Since 1994 he has been a professor of mathematics in the United States. He was a professor at Johns Hopkins University until 2002 when he became the first person to hold the Mina Rees Chair in mathematics at the Graduate Center Faculty at The City University of New York.

  • Victor Kolyvagin at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • Kolyvagin's Biography
  • References

    Victor Kolyvagin Wikipedia