DENNIS SULLIVAN
'Dennis Parnel Sullivan' (born 1941, Port Huron, Michigan) is an American mathematician. He is known for work in topology, both algebraic and geometric, and on dynamical systems. He holds the Albert Einstein Chair at the City University of New York, and is a professor at Stony Brook University.
His doctorate from 1966 was from Princeton University. His thesis, titled ''Triangulating homotopy equivalences'', was written under the supervision of William Browder. He was for many years a permanent member of the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques.
Sullivan is one of the founders of the surgery method of classifying high-dimensional manifolds, along with Browder, Sergei Novikov and C. T. C. Wall. In homotopy theory, Sullivan put forward the radical concept that spaces could directly be ''localised'', a procedure hitherto applied to the algebraic constructs made from them. The Sullivan conjecture, proved in its original form by Haynes Miller, states that the classifying space ''BG'' of a finite group ''G'' is sufficiently different from any finite CW complex ''X'', that it maps to such an ''X'' only 'with difficulty'; in a more formal statement, the space of all mappings ''BG'' to ''X'', as pointed spaces and given the compact-open topology, is weakly contractible. This area has generated considerable further research. (Both these matters are discussed in his 1970 MIT notes.)
In 1985, he proved the No wandering domain theorem. The Parry-Sullivan invariant is named after him and the English mathematician Bill Parry.
Awards include the 1971 Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry, the 1981 Prix Élie Cartan of the French Academy of Sciences, the King Faisal International Prize for Science in 1994, the 2004 National Medal of Science and the 2006 AMS Steele Prize.
★
★ Sullivan's homepage at CUNY
His doctorate from 1966 was from Princeton University. His thesis, titled ''Triangulating homotopy equivalences'', was written under the supervision of William Browder. He was for many years a permanent member of the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques.
Sullivan is one of the founders of the surgery method of classifying high-dimensional manifolds, along with Browder, Sergei Novikov and C. T. C. Wall. In homotopy theory, Sullivan put forward the radical concept that spaces could directly be ''localised'', a procedure hitherto applied to the algebraic constructs made from them. The Sullivan conjecture, proved in its original form by Haynes Miller, states that the classifying space ''BG'' of a finite group ''G'' is sufficiently different from any finite CW complex ''X'', that it maps to such an ''X'' only 'with difficulty'; in a more formal statement, the space of all mappings ''BG'' to ''X'', as pointed spaces and given the compact-open topology, is weakly contractible. This area has generated considerable further research. (Both these matters are discussed in his 1970 MIT notes.)
In 1985, he proved the No wandering domain theorem. The Parry-Sullivan invariant is named after him and the English mathematician Bill Parry.
| Contents |
| Awards and honors |
| External link |
Awards and honors
Awards include the 1971 Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry, the 1981 Prix Élie Cartan of the French Academy of Sciences, the King Faisal International Prize for Science in 1994, the 2004 National Medal of Science and the 2006 AMS Steele Prize.
External link
★
★ Sullivan's homepage at CUNY
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