Sergei Petrovich Novikov
|
Sergei Petrovich Novikov (also Serguei) (Russian: Сергей Петрович Новиков) (b. 20 March 1938) is a Russian mathematician, noted for work in both algebraic topology and soliton theory. He was born in Gorky,Russian SFSR (now Nizhny Novgorod, Russia).
Sergei grew up in a family of talented mathematicians. His father was Pyotr Sergeyevich Novikov, who gave the negative solution of the word problem for groups. His mother Ludmila and uncle Mstislav were also important mathematicians.
In 1955 Novikov entered the Moscow State University (graduated from it in 1960). Four years later he received the Moscow Mathematical Society Award for young mathematicians. In the same year he defended a dissertation for the Candidate of Science in Physics and Mathematics degree at the Moscow State University (it is equivalent to PhD). In 1965 he defended a dissertation for the Doctor of Science in Physics and Mathematics degree there. In 1966 he became the Corresponding member of the USSR Academy of Sciences.
His early work was in cobordism theory, in relative isolation. Among other advances he showed how the Adams spectral sequence, a powerful tool for proceeding from homology theory to the calculation of homotopy groups, could be adapted to the new (at that time) cohomology theory typified by cobordism and K-theory. This required the development of the idea of cohomology operations in the general setting, since the basis of the spectral sequence is the initial data of Ext functors taken with respect to a ring of such operations, generalising the Steenrod algebra. The resulting Adams-Novikov spectral sequence is now a basic tool in stable homotopy theory.
Novikov also carried out important research in geometric topology, and posed the Novikov conjecture. This work was recognised by the award in 1970 of the Fields Medal. From about 1971 he moved to work in the field of isospectral flows, with connections to the theory of theta functions.
Since 1971 Novikov has worked at the Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics of the USSR Academy of Sciences. In 1981 he was elected a Full Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences (Russian Academy of Sciences since 1991). In 1982 Novikov was also appointed the Head of the Chair in Higher Geometry and Topology at the Moscow State University.
As of 2004, Sergei is the Head of the Department of geometry and topology at the Steklov Mathematical Institute, he also teaches at the University of Maryland, College Park and is the Principal Researcher of the Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics in Moscow.
In 2005 Novikov was awarded the Wolf Prize for his contributions to algebraic topology, differential topology and to mathematical physics. He became one of just eight mathematicians who received both the Fields Medal and the Wolf Prize.
Awards
- Lenin Prize (1967)
- Fields Medal (1970)
- Lobachevsky International Prize (1981)
- Wolf Prize (2005)
External links
- Curriculum Vitae (http://www.mi.ras.ru/~snovikov/index.html) on the website of Steklov Mathematical Institute
- Biography (in Russian) (http://higeom.math.msu.su/people/novikov/) on the website of Moscow State University
- Biography of S.P. Novikov (http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Novikov_Sergi.html)pl:Siergiej P. Nowikow