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John Tate (mathematician)

John Torrence Tate Jr. (March 13, 1925 – October 16, 2019) was an American mathematician distinguished for many fundamental contributions in algebraic number theory, arithmetic geometry, and related areas in algebraic geometry. He was awarded the Abel Prize in 2010.

John Tate
Tate in 1993
Born
John Torrence Tate Jr.

(1925-03-13)March 13, 1925
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
DiedOctober 16, 2019(2019-10-16) (aged 94)
Lexington, Massachusetts, U.S.
Alma materHarvard University (AB, 1946)
Princeton University (PhD, 1950)
Known forTate conjecture
Tate module
Hodge-Tate module
Serre-Tate theorem
Shafarevich-Tate group
Sato-Tate conjecture
Rigid analytic geometry
Tate curve
Tate cohomology group
Tate's thesis
Tate's algorithm
Barsotti-Tate group
AwardsAbel Prize (2010)
Wolf Prize (2002/03)
Steele Prize (1995)
Cole Prize in Number Theory (1956)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsPrinceton University (1950–1953)
Columbia University (1953–1954)
Harvard University (1954–1990)
University of Texas at Austin (1990–2009)
ThesisFourier Analysis in Number Fields and Hecke's Zeta Functions (1950)
Doctoral advisorEmil Artin
Doctoral students
InfluencedJohn H. Coates

Biography

Tate was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His father, John Tate Sr., was a professor of physics at the University of Minnesota and a longtime editor of Physical Review. His mother, Lois Beatrice Fossler, was a high school English teacher. Tate Jr. received his bachelor's degree in mathematics in 1946 from Harvard University and entered the doctoral program in physics at Princeton University. He later transferred to the mathematics department and received his PhD in mathematics in 1950 after completing a doctoral dissertation titled "Fourier analysis in number fields and Hecke's zeta functions" under the supervision of Emil Artin.[1] Tate taught at Harvard for 36 years before joining the University of Texas in 1990 as a Sid W. Richardson Foundation Regents Chair.[2] He retired from the Texas mathematics department in 2009 and returned to Harvard as a professor emeritus.[3]

Tate died at his home in Lexington, Massachusetts on October 16, 2019, at the age of 94.[4][5][6]

Mathematical work

Tate's thesis (1950) on Fourier analysis in number fields has become one of the ingredients for the modern theory of automorphic forms and their L-functions, notably by its use of the adele ring, its self-duality and harmonic analysis on it; independently and a little earlier, Kenkichi Iwasawa obtained a similar theory. Together with his advisor Emil Artin, Tate gave a cohomological treatment of global class field theory using techniques of group cohomology applied to the idele class group and Galois cohomology.[7] This treatment made more transparent some of the algebraic structures in the previous approaches to class field theory, which used central division algebras to compute the Brauer group of a global field.

Subsequently, Tate introduced what are now known as Tate cohomology groups. In the decades following that discovery he extended the reach of Galois cohomology with the Poitou–Tate duality, the Tate–Shafarevich group, and relations with algebraic K-theory. With Jonathan Lubin, he recast local class field theory by the use of formal groups, creating the Lubin–Tate local theory of complex multiplication.

He has also made a number of individual and important contributions to p-adic theory; for example, Tate's invention of rigid analytic spaces can be said to have spawned the entire field of rigid analytic geometry. He found a p-adic analogue of Hodge theory, now called Hodge–Tate theory, which has blossomed into another central technique of modern algebraic number theory.[7] Other innovations of his include the "Tate curve" parametrization for certain p-adic elliptic curves and the p-divisible (Tate–Barsotti) groups.

Many of his results were not immediately published and some of them were written up by Serge Lang, Jean-Pierre Serre, Joseph H. Silverman and others. Tate and Serre collaborated on a paper on good reduction of abelian varieties. The classification of abelian varieties over finite fields was carried out by Taira Honda and Tate (the Honda–Tate theorem).[8]

The Tate conjectures are the equivalent for étale cohomology of the Hodge conjecture. They relate to the Galois action on the ℓ-adic cohomology of an algebraic variety, identifying a space of "Tate cycles" (the fixed cycles for a suitably Tate-twisted action) that conjecturally picks out the algebraic cycles. A special case of the conjectures, which are open in the general case, was involved in the proof of the Mordell conjecture by Gerd Faltings.

Tate has also had a major influence on the development of number theory through his role as a Ph.D. advisor. His students include George Bergman, Ted Chinburg, Bernard Dwork, Benedict Gross, Robert Kottwitz, Jonathan Lubin, Stephen Lichtenbaum, James Milne, V. Kumar Murty, Carl Pomerance, Ken Ribet, Joseph H. Silverman, Dinesh Thakur, and William C. Waterhouse.

Awards and honors

Tate was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1941.[9] In 1956 Tate was awarded the American Mathematical Society's Cole Prize for outstanding contributions to number theory. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1958.[10] He was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1969.[11] In 1992 he was elected as Foreign Member of the French Academie des Sciences. In 1995 he received the Leroy P. Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement from the American Mathematical Society. He was awarded a Wolf Prize in Mathematics in 2002/03 for his creation of fundamental concepts in algebraic number theory.[12] In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[13]

I got a phone call at 7 in the morning from a guy with a very strong Norwegian accent. That was the first I heard of it. I feel very fortunate. I realize that there is any number of people they could have chosen.

— John Tate[3]

In 2010 the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, of which he was a member,[14] awarded him the Abel Prize, citing "his vast and lasting impact on the theory of numbers". According to a release by the Abel Prize committee, "Many of the major lines of research in algebraic number theory and arithmetic geometry are only possible because of the incisive contributions and illuminating insights of John Tate. He has truly left a conspicuous imprint on modern mathematics."[15]

Tate has been described as "one of the seminal mathematicians for the past half-century" by William Beckner, Chairman of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Texas at Austin.[3]

Personal life

Tate married twice. His first wife was Karin Artin, his doctoral advisor's daughter. Together they had three daughters, six grandchildren, and a great-grandson. One of his grandchildren, Dustin Clausen [de], currently works as a mathematics Professor at Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques. After Tate divorced, he married Carol MacPherson.[16]

Selected publications

  • Tate, John (1950), Fourier analysis in number fields and Hecke's zeta functions, Princeton University Ph.D. thesis under Emil Artin. Reprinted in Cassels, J. W. S.; Fröhlich, Albrecht, eds. (1967), Algebraic number theory, London: Academic Press, pp. 305–347, MR 0215665
  • Tate, John (1952), "The higher dimensional cohomology groups of class field theory", Ann. of Math., 2, 56 (2): 294–297, doi:10.2307/1969801, JSTOR 1969801, MR 0049950
  • Lang, Serge; Tate, John (1958), "Principal homogeneous spaces over abelian varieties", American Journal of Mathematics, 80 (3): 659–684, doi:10.2307/2372778, JSTOR 2372778, MR 0106226
  • Tate, John (1965), "Algebraic cycles and poles of zeta functions", Arithmetical Algebraic Geometry (Proc. Conf. Purdue Univ., 1963), New York: Harper & Row, pp. 93–110, MR 0225778
  • Lubin, Jonathan; Tate, John (1965), "Formal complex multiplication in local fields", Annals of Mathematics, 81 (2): 380–387, doi:10.2307/1970622, JSTOR 1970622, MR 0172878
  • Tate, John (1966), "Endomorphisms of abelian varieties over finite fields", Inventiones Mathematicae, 2 (2): 134–144, Bibcode:1966InMat...2..134T, doi:10.1007/bf01404549, MR 0206004, S2CID 245902
  • Tate, John (1967), "p-divisible groups", in Springer, T. A. (ed.), Proceedings of a Conference on Local Fields, Springer-Verlag, pp. 158–183, MR 0231827
  • Artin, Emil; Tate, John (2009) [1967], Class field theory, AMS Chelsea Publishing, ISBN 978-0-8218-4426-7, MR 2467155
  • Serre, Jean-Pierre; Tate, John (1968), "Good reduction of abelian varieties", Annals of Mathematics, 88 (3): 462–517, doi:10.2307/1970722, JSTOR 1970722, MR 0236190
  • Tate, John (1971), "Rigid analytic spaces", Inventiones Mathematicae, 12 (4): 257–289, Bibcode:1971InMat..12..257T, doi:10.1007/bf01403307, MR 0306196, S2CID 121364708
  • Tate, John (1976), "Relations between K2 and Galois cohomology", Inventiones Mathematicae, 36: 257–274, Bibcode:1976InMat..36..257T, doi:10.1007/bf01390012, MR 0429837, S2CID 118285898
  • Tate, John (1984), Les conjectures de Stark sur les fonctions L d'Artin en s=0, Progress in Mathematics, vol. 47, Boston, Massachusetts: Birkhäuser Boston, Inc., ISBN 0-8176-3188-7, MR 0782485
  • Collected Works of John Tate: Parts I and II, American Mathematical Society, (2016)

See also

References

  1. ^ Tate, John Torrence (1950). Fourier analysis in number fields and Hecke's zeta functions.
  2. ^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "John Tate (mathematician)", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  3. ^ a b c Ralph K.M. Haurwitz (March 24, 2010). . Statesman.com. Archived from the original on March 26, 2010.
  4. ^ "John T. Tate, Familiar Name in the World of Numbers, Dies at 94". The New York Times. October 28, 2019.
  5. ^ "John Tate, 1925–2019". Harvard. October 17, 2019. Retrieved October 17, 2019.
  6. ^ "Remembering Eminent UT Austin Mathematician John Tate". October 18, 2019. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  7. ^ a b . Xinhua.net. 2010-03-25. Archived from the original on 2010-08-22.
  8. ^ J.T. Tate, "Classes d'isogénie des variétés abéliennes sur un corps fini (d' après T. Honda)", Sem. Bourbaki Exp. 352, Lect. notes in math., 179, Springer (1971)
  9. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  10. ^ "John Torrence Tate, Jr". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  11. ^ "John T. Tate". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  12. ^ The 2002/3 Wolf Foundation Prize in Mathematics. Wolf Foundation. Accessed March 24, 2010.
  13. ^ List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2013-08-25.
  14. ^ (in Norwegian). Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. Archived from the original on 10 November 2013. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
  15. ^ "2010: John Torrence Tate". The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  16. ^ "John Tate, 94". The Harvard Gazette. 7 October 2020.
  • Milne, J, "The Work of John Tate"

External links

  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "John Tate (mathematician)", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  • John Tate at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "The Abel Prize Interview 2010 with John Torrence Tate". YouTube. December 10, 2019.
  • Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "John Tate – The Abel Lecture – The arithmetic of elliptic curves". YouTube. March 9, 2020; lecture at the University of Oslo, May 26, 2010{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "The Heidelberg Laureate Forum Foundation presents the HLF Portraits: John Torrence Tate". YouTube. April 4, 2017.

john, tate, mathematician, john, torrence, tate, march, 1925, october, 2019, american, mathematician, distinguished, many, fundamental, contributions, algebraic, number, theory, arithmetic, geometry, related, areas, algebraic, geometry, awarded, abel, prize, 2. John Torrence Tate Jr March 13 1925 October 16 2019 was an American mathematician distinguished for many fundamental contributions in algebraic number theory arithmetic geometry and related areas in algebraic geometry He was awarded the Abel Prize in 2010 John TateTate in 1993BornJohn Torrence Tate Jr 1925 03 13 March 13 1925Minneapolis Minnesota U S DiedOctober 16 2019 2019 10 16 aged 94 Lexington Massachusetts U S Alma materHarvard University AB 1946 Princeton University PhD 1950 Known forTate conjectureTate moduleHodge Tate moduleSerre Tate theoremShafarevich Tate groupSato Tate conjectureRigid analytic geometryTate curveTate cohomology groupTate s thesisTate s algorithmBarsotti Tate groupAwardsAbel Prize 2010 Wolf Prize 2002 03 Steele Prize 1995 Cole Prize in Number Theory 1956 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsPrinceton University 1950 1953 Columbia University 1953 1954 Harvard University 1954 1990 University of Texas at Austin 1990 2009 ThesisFourier Analysis in Number Fields and Hecke s Zeta Functions 1950 Doctoral advisorEmil ArtinDoctoral studentsList of notable students George BergmanJoe BuhlerTed ChinburgBernard DworkBenedict GrossRobert KottwitzV Kumar MurtyStephen LichtenbaumJonathan LubinJames S MilneCarl PomeranceKenneth Alan RibetMichael SchlessingerJoseph H SilvermanDinesh ThakurJerrold B TunnellWilliam C WaterhouseInfluencedJohn H Coates Contents 1 Biography 2 Mathematical work 3 Awards and honors 4 Personal life 5 Selected publications 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBiography EditTate was born in Minneapolis Minnesota His father John Tate Sr was a professor of physics at the University of Minnesota and a longtime editor of Physical Review His mother Lois Beatrice Fossler was a high school English teacher Tate Jr received his bachelor s degree in mathematics in 1946 from Harvard University and entered the doctoral program in physics at Princeton University He later transferred to the mathematics department and received his PhD in mathematics in 1950 after completing a doctoral dissertation titled Fourier analysis in number fields and Hecke s zeta functions under the supervision of Emil Artin 1 Tate taught at Harvard for 36 years before joining the University of Texas in 1990 as a Sid W Richardson Foundation Regents Chair 2 He retired from the Texas mathematics department in 2009 and returned to Harvard as a professor emeritus 3 Tate died at his home in Lexington Massachusetts on October 16 2019 at the age of 94 4 5 6 Mathematical work EditTate s thesis 1950 on Fourier analysis in number fields has become one of the ingredients for the modern theory of automorphic forms and their L functions notably by its use of the adele ring its self duality and harmonic analysis on it independently and a little earlier Kenkichi Iwasawa obtained a similar theory Together with his advisor Emil Artin Tate gave a cohomological treatment of global class field theory using techniques of group cohomology applied to the idele class group and Galois cohomology 7 This treatment made more transparent some of the algebraic structures in the previous approaches to class field theory which used central division algebras to compute the Brauer group of a global field Subsequently Tate introduced what are now known as Tate cohomology groups In the decades following that discovery he extended the reach of Galois cohomology with the Poitou Tate duality the Tate Shafarevich group and relations with algebraic K theory With Jonathan Lubin he recast local class field theory by the use of formal groups creating the Lubin Tate local theory of complex multiplication He has also made a number of individual and important contributions to p adic theory for example Tate s invention of rigid analytic spaces can be said to have spawned the entire field of rigid analytic geometry He found a p adic analogue of Hodge theory now called Hodge Tate theory which has blossomed into another central technique of modern algebraic number theory 7 Other innovations of his include the Tate curve parametrization for certain p adic elliptic curves and the p divisible Tate Barsotti groups Many of his results were not immediately published and some of them were written up by Serge Lang Jean Pierre Serre Joseph H Silverman and others Tate and Serre collaborated on a paper on good reduction of abelian varieties The classification of abelian varieties over finite fields was carried out by Taira Honda and Tate the Honda Tate theorem 8 The Tate conjectures are the equivalent for etale cohomology of the Hodge conjecture They relate to the Galois action on the ℓ adic cohomology of an algebraic variety identifying a space of Tate cycles the fixed cycles for a suitably Tate twisted action that conjecturally picks out the algebraic cycles A special case of the conjectures which are open in the general case was involved in the proof of the Mordell conjecture by Gerd Faltings Tate has also had a major influence on the development of number theory through his role as a Ph D advisor His students include George Bergman Ted Chinburg Bernard Dwork Benedict Gross Robert Kottwitz Jonathan Lubin Stephen Lichtenbaum James Milne V Kumar Murty Carl Pomerance Ken Ribet Joseph H Silverman Dinesh Thakur and William C Waterhouse Awards and honors EditTate was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1941 9 In 1956 Tate was awarded the American Mathematical Society s Cole Prize for outstanding contributions to number theory He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1958 10 He was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1969 11 In 1992 he was elected as Foreign Member of the French Academie des Sciences In 1995 he received the Leroy P Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement from the American Mathematical Society He was awarded a Wolf Prize in Mathematics in 2002 03 for his creation of fundamental concepts in algebraic number theory 12 In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society 13 I got a phone call at 7 in the morning from a guy with a very strong Norwegian accent That was the first I heard of it I feel very fortunate I realize that there is any number of people they could have chosen John Tate 3 In 2010 the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters of which he was a member 14 awarded him the Abel Prize citing his vast and lasting impact on the theory of numbers According to a release by the Abel Prize committee Many of the major lines of research in algebraic number theory and arithmetic geometry are only possible because of the incisive contributions and illuminating insights of John Tate He has truly left a conspicuous imprint on modern mathematics 15 Tate has been described as one of the seminal mathematicians for the past half century by William Beckner Chairman of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Texas at Austin 3 Personal life EditTate married twice His first wife was Karin Artin his doctoral advisor s daughter Together they had three daughters six grandchildren and a great grandson One of his grandchildren Dustin Clausen de currently works as a mathematics Professor at Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques After Tate divorced he married Carol MacPherson 16 Selected publications EditTate John 1950 Fourier analysis in number fields and Hecke s zeta functions Princeton University Ph D thesis under Emil Artin Reprinted in Cassels J W S Frohlich Albrecht eds 1967 Algebraic number theory London Academic Press pp 305 347 MR 0215665 Tate John 1952 The higher dimensional cohomology groups of class field theory Ann of Math 2 56 2 294 297 doi 10 2307 1969801 JSTOR 1969801 MR 0049950 Lang Serge Tate John 1958 Principal homogeneous spaces over abelian varieties American Journal of Mathematics 80 3 659 684 doi 10 2307 2372778 JSTOR 2372778 MR 0106226 Tate John 1965 Algebraic cycles and poles of zeta functions Arithmetical Algebraic Geometry Proc Conf Purdue Univ 1963 New York Harper amp Row pp 93 110 MR 0225778 Lubin Jonathan Tate John 1965 Formal complex multiplication in local fields Annals of Mathematics 81 2 380 387 doi 10 2307 1970622 JSTOR 1970622 MR 0172878 Tate John 1966 Endomorphisms of abelian varieties over finite fields Inventiones Mathematicae 2 2 134 144 Bibcode 1966InMat 2 134T doi 10 1007 bf01404549 MR 0206004 S2CID 245902 Tate John 1967 p divisible groups in Springer T A ed Proceedings of a Conference on Local Fields Springer Verlag pp 158 183 MR 0231827 Artin Emil Tate John 2009 1967 Class field theory AMS Chelsea Publishing ISBN 978 0 8218 4426 7 MR 2467155 Serre Jean Pierre Tate John 1968 Good reduction of abelian varieties Annals of Mathematics 88 3 462 517 doi 10 2307 1970722 JSTOR 1970722 MR 0236190 Tate John 1971 Rigid analytic spaces Inventiones Mathematicae 12 4 257 289 Bibcode 1971InMat 12 257T doi 10 1007 bf01403307 MR 0306196 S2CID 121364708 Tate John 1976 Relations between K2 and Galois cohomology Inventiones Mathematicae 36 257 274 Bibcode 1976InMat 36 257T doi 10 1007 bf01390012 MR 0429837 S2CID 118285898 Tate John 1984 Les conjectures de Stark sur les fonctions L d Artin en s 0 Progress in Mathematics vol 47 Boston Massachusetts Birkhauser Boston Inc ISBN 0 8176 3188 7 MR 0782485 Collected Works of John Tate Parts I and II American Mathematical Society 2016 See also EditArtin Tate lemma Barsotti Tate group Birch Tate conjecture Hodge Tate module Honda Tate theorem Koszul Tate resolution Local Tate duality Lubin Tate formal group law Mumford Tate group Neron Tate height Sato Tate conjecture Serre Tate theorem Tate algebra Tate s algorithm Tate duality Tate s isogeny theorem Tate pairing Tate topology Tate twist Tate vector space Rigid analytic spaceReferences Edit Tate John Torrence 1950 Fourier analysis in number fields and Hecke s zeta functions O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F John Tate mathematician MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews a b c Ralph K M Haurwitz March 24 2010 Retired UT mathematician wins prestigious Abel Prize Statesman com Archived from the original on March 26 2010 John T Tate Familiar Name in the World of Numbers Dies at 94 The New York Times October 28 2019 John Tate 1925 2019 Harvard October 17 2019 Retrieved October 17 2019 Remembering Eminent UT Austin Mathematician John Tate October 18 2019 Retrieved October 19 2019 a b American mathematician John Tate wins 2010 Abel Prize Xinhua net 2010 03 25 Archived from the original on 2010 08 22 J T Tate Classes d isogenie des varietes abeliennes sur un corps fini d apres T Honda Sem Bourbaki Exp 352 Lect notes in math 179 Springer 1971 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2023 04 28 John Torrence Tate Jr American Academy of Arts amp Sciences Retrieved 2023 04 28 John T Tate www nasonline org Retrieved 2023 04 28 The 2002 3 Wolf Foundation Prize in Mathematics Wolf Foundation Accessed March 24 2010 List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society retrieved 2013 08 25 Gruppe 1 Matematiske fag in Norwegian Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters Archived from the original on 10 November 2013 Retrieved 7 October 2010 2010 John Torrence Tate The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link John Tate 94 The Harvard Gazette 7 October 2020 Milne J The Work of John Tate External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to John Tate O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F John Tate mathematician MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews John Tate at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine The Abel Prize Interview 2010 with John Torrence Tate YouTube December 10 2019 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine John Tate The Abel Lecture The arithmetic of elliptic curves YouTube March 9 2020 lecture at the University of Oslo May 26 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint postscript link Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine The Heidelberg Laureate Forum Foundation presents the HLF Portraits John Torrence Tate YouTube April 4 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Tate mathematician amp oldid 1157310490, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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